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Yahoo! News: World - China |
- Trump: 'I want to get out' of Syria
- Designer Of Waterslide That Decapitated 10-Year-Old Boy Seized On Murder Charge
- YouTube shooting: Female suspect dead at scene
- Democrats Score Big Win In Wisconsin Supreme Court Race
- Labor of love: Vintage Vespa fans cling to the past in Pakistan
- Parkland Students Protest Clear Backpacks With Tampons And $1.05 Price Tags
- APNewsBreak: Woman says she reported abuse in 2013
- Trump Tells Baltic Presidents Not To Call On U.S. Reporters: 'Real News, Not Fake News'
- Trump administration seeks to close immigration 'loopholes'
- As YouTube Shooting Unfolded, Fake News Spread Like Wildfire On Twitter
- Russia requests Security Council meeting on spy poisoning
- Crash Tests Show Some Small-SUV Passengers Less Safe than Drivers
- Prosecutors: Man forced girl to watch killing of boyfriend
- Saudi crown prince says Israelis have right to their own land
- What to Know About Suspected YouTube Shooter Nasim Aghdam
- 7 Great Muscle Cars Of The '70s
- 17 States Sue Trump Administration Over Census Citizenship Question
- Watch the Jaws moment for police as great white shark stalks their dinghy
- Florida car crash kills four British family members
- Israel arrests 10 Gazans accused of planning naval attack
- The Latest: Fallin wants teachers to get back to classrooms
- Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey Calls Out Trump Over 'Thoughts And Prayers' Tweet Following Shooting
- British Labour leader Corbyn criticized for spending Passover with anti-Israel group
- Former U.S. Army Sniper, 2 Other Soldiers Accused of Becoming International Hitmen
- Mother allegedly used stun gun to wake son for Easter service
- NASA's X-Plane is designed to fly at supersonic speeds without the sonic boom
- Fiji PM warns of 'frightening new era' as he blames deadly cyclone on climate change
- Kaley Cuoco Explains Why Her Ex-Husband 'Ruined' Marriage For Her
- N. Korea rights record likely off table at Korean summit: Seoul
- UK defense lab: No ID yet for source of nerve agent
- Graphic Street Art Of Trump Shooting Schoolchildren Sparks Outcry
- Syrian Kurdish leader signals possible joint action with Iraq
- Architectural Digest, Bon Appetit & Le Coucou Celebrate the Arrival of Liebherr's Monolith
- 1 Elephant Died and 4 Others Were Hurt After a Circus Truck Crash
- How Did a Miles-Long Crevice Appear in the Earth Overnight?
- Civil jury says man responsible for woman's death at mansion
- Betsy DeVos Mulls The Fate Of Guidance Designed To Reduce Racial Bias In Schools
- Dashboard video shows Sacramento sheriff's car hit protester
- A Trade War Could Cost The GOP At The Ballot Box
- Russian rocket tests force partial closing of Baltic Sea, airspace
- Harley-Davidson Recalls 250,000 Bikes for Faulty Brakes
- Gun safety advocates seek to override Rauner's veto of gun dealer license measure
Trump: 'I want to get out' of Syria Posted: 03 Apr 2018 12:22 PM PDT |
Designer Of Waterslide That Decapitated 10-Year-Old Boy Seized On Murder Charge Posted: 03 Apr 2018 08:05 AM PDT |
YouTube shooting: Female suspect dead at scene Posted: 03 Apr 2018 08:46 AM PDT |
Democrats Score Big Win In Wisconsin Supreme Court Race Posted: 03 Apr 2018 07:04 PM PDT |
Labor of love: Vintage Vespa fans cling to the past in Pakistan Posted: 03 Apr 2018 12:30 PM PDT |
Parkland Students Protest Clear Backpacks With Tampons And $1.05 Price Tags Posted: 03 Apr 2018 12:33 PM PDT |
APNewsBreak: Woman says she reported abuse in 2013 Posted: 03 Apr 2018 07:57 PM PDT |
Trump Tells Baltic Presidents Not To Call On U.S. Reporters: 'Real News, Not Fake News' Posted: 03 Apr 2018 12:18 PM PDT |
Trump administration seeks to close immigration 'loopholes' Posted: 03 Apr 2018 09:37 AM PDT |
As YouTube Shooting Unfolded, Fake News Spread Like Wildfire On Twitter Posted: 03 Apr 2018 06:31 PM PDT |
Russia requests Security Council meeting on spy poisoning Posted: 04 Apr 2018 10:37 AM PDT Russia has asked for a UN Security Council meeting over the poisoning of a former Russian double agent in Britain, the country's ambassador to the UN announced Wednesday. Vassily Nebenzia said Russia was requesting a meeting Thursday at 1900 GMT over the British government's implication of Moscow in the nerve agent attack on former spy Sergei Skripal and his daughter Yulia. The Kremlin has vehemently denied any involvement in the March 4 attack, which Britain says was carried out with a military-grade nerve agent developed by the Soviet Union. |
Crash Tests Show Some Small-SUV Passengers Less Safe than Drivers Posted: 03 Apr 2018 09:01 PM PDT |
Prosecutors: Man forced girl to watch killing of boyfriend Posted: 03 Apr 2018 05:44 PM PDT |
Saudi crown prince says Israelis have right to their own land Posted: 03 Apr 2018 08:58 AM PDT Saudi Arabia's crown prince said in a published interview that Israelis are entitled to live peacefully on their own land, another public sign of an apparent thawing in ties between the two countries. Asked if he believes the Jewish people have a right to a nation state in at least part of their ancestral homeland, Mohammed bin Salman was quoted by U.S. magazine The Atlantic as saying: "I believe the Palestinians and the Israelis have the right to have their own land. It has maintained for years that normalizing relations hinges on an Israeli withdrawal from Arab lands captured in the 1967 Middle East war - territory Palestinians seek for a future state. |
What to Know About Suspected YouTube Shooter Nasim Aghdam Posted: 03 Apr 2018 03:29 PM PDT |
7 Great Muscle Cars Of The '70s Posted: 03 Apr 2018 03:50 PM PDT |
17 States Sue Trump Administration Over Census Citizenship Question Posted: 03 Apr 2018 09:04 AM PDT |
Watch the Jaws moment for police as great white shark stalks their dinghy Posted: 04 Apr 2018 01:29 AM PDT Police in South Australia had a "Jaws" experience when their operation was interrupted by a great white shark. The shark serenely followed them as they rode on a small police dinghy, which was in turn pursuing a recreational fishing boat selected for a random breath test. Their inflatable dinghy was only 4.5m long, shorter than the shark following them. The animal, after a few minutes, left the police alone and went to circle the fishing boat. The force saw the funny side and named the shark Noah. The South Australia Police Force wrote on social media: "Police launch Investigator 2 had a close encounter with a Great White shark today while patrolling at Tapley Shoal, about 9 nautical miles east of Edithburgh. The shark in pursuit of the boat Credit: REUTERS "Police were concentrating on recreational boats and checking registration, licences and safety equipment along with alcohol and drug testing operators when they were paid a visit by one of the locals. "30 boats were checked and pleasingly, no operators tested positive to drugs or alcohol and only a few minor breaches for safety equipment were found. Noah wasn't keen on being breath tested and our Water Operations Unit officers were happy to oblige!" Mark Oates, one of the men on the fishing boat, told ABC that he was drift fishing when his friend swore and said: "Look at the size of this thing that's come up behind us!" The great white dwarfed the dinghy Credit: REUTERS He explained: "I told [the police] to back off a bit because the shark was right next to us. "For probably the next 10 or 15 minutes we just sat around. The police brought the big boat in, which is where the footage from above the shark has come from. "There was very little fish caught that day, I can tell you." The fishermen were not breathalysed in the end, and said they thought it was because the police were not too keen on coming very close to them and their travelling companion. |
Florida car crash kills four British family members Posted: 03 Apr 2018 11:18 AM PDT Four members of a British family have been killed in a car crash while on holiday in Florida, police have said. The family had just left Nasa's Kennedy Space Centre when their rented Mitsubishi saloon was hit by a Ford pick-up truck at about 18:00 local time [23:00 GMT] on Monday. Driver Adam Stephenson, 30, his wife Maryanne Stephenson, 29, and his parents Brian Stephenson, 66, and Sheralyn Stephenson, 56, died in the collision in Titusville. |
Israel arrests 10 Gazans accused of planning naval attack Posted: 04 Apr 2018 02:58 AM PDT Israeli authorities said Wednesday they have arrested 10 Palestinians from the Gaza Strip accused of planning a missile attack and hostage taking against a navy ship. The announcement of the March 12 arrests comes ahead of expected new mass protests along the Gaza Strip's border with Israel on Friday. Authorities did not immediately respond to a question on why the announcement was delayed for more than three weeks, though Israel often keeps such arrests under a gag order while it investigates. |
The Latest: Fallin wants teachers to get back to classrooms Posted: 04 Apr 2018 03:37 PM PDT |
Posted: 03 Apr 2018 10:38 PM PDT |
British Labour leader Corbyn criticized for spending Passover with anti-Israel group Posted: 03 Apr 2018 05:14 AM PDT By Andrew MacAskill LONDON (Reuters) - British opposition leader Jeremy Corbyn risked further souring his relationship with the Jewish community by attending a Passover event with a left-wing Jewish group that has called for the destruction of Israel. Corbyn spent Monday evening at a ritual feast hosted by Jewdas, a group which described Israel in December as a "steaming pile of sewage which needs to be properly disposed of". The group also called recent protests against Corbyn for failing to tackle anti-Semitism "faux-outrage greased with hypocrisy and opportunism". |
Former U.S. Army Sniper, 2 Other Soldiers Accused of Becoming International Hitmen Posted: 04 Apr 2018 07:48 AM PDT |
Mother allegedly used stun gun to wake son for Easter service Posted: 03 Apr 2018 02:50 AM PDT |
NASA's X-Plane is designed to fly at supersonic speeds without the sonic boom Posted: 03 Apr 2018 12:19 PM PDT NASA wants to prove that it can fly a plane faster than the speed of sound without blasting American neighborhoods below with sonic booms. Previously, commercial supersonic travel had been limited to the Atlantic Ocean, where people wouldn't be jarred awake by planes traveling overhead at more than 760 miles per hour. But with an innovative plane design that might subtly morph in the air to tame sound waves, NASA hopes to build a quieter supersonic plane that would revolutionize travel. Our cross-country flight times would be cut in half. NASA calls it the X-Plane, and the agency just awarded the aerospace and defense company Lockheed Martin the $247.5 million contract to build the first one. SEE ALSO: Finding alien life won't cause chaos and panic, according to scientists At a news conference Tuesday morning, NASA said that this first X-Plane is a data-collecting experiment expected to take flight in 2021. The plane will be 94-feet-long, smaller than today's medium-sized commercial aircraft, like the popular Boeing 737. It will typically cruise around speeds of 1.4 Mach, which is approximately 940 mph when traveling at 55,000 feet, according to a NASA spokesperson. A conceptual graphic of what the NASA X-Plane prototype might look like.Image: NASAToday's commercial airliners typically travel between 550 and 590 miles per hour, far short of the 767 mph speed of sound. NASA aeronautics engineers underscored that this plane isn't a prototype for a defense mission or a private jet — but an experimental plane intended to fly over American communities and see if it is quiet enough to be a real, usable technology. NASA's goal is to not produce a sonic boom at all, but something that sounds more like a soft thud. "I'm trying not to use the word sonic boom," said Peter Coen, project manager for NASA's Commercial Supersonics Technology Project. "I'm trying to ban that from everyone's vocabulary." Getting a plane to produce a thud, as opposed to a thunderous blast, broadly means controlling the strength and position of the shock waves produced by the supersonic-speeding plane as it zooms through the air. NASA's slick X-Plane graphic.Image: NASAThis is something Lockheed Martin and NASA flight engineers will spend the next couple years developing, so by the time a sound wave hits the ground — possibly in a neighborhood near you — it's weakened to a thump, "not a boom," said Coen. Lockheed Martin has already designed much of the sleek plane. If all goes as planned, the experimental plane will make its first flight in 2021. Then, after NASA ensures the plane is safe and passes "acoustic validation tests," the aircraft will begin flying over a variety of U.S. communities in 2023. These flight tests will run through 2025. "We'll be flying over medium-sized cities, urban towns, and rural populations," said Ed Waggoner, program director for NASA's Integrated Aviation Systems Program. "It will be representative of populations that will be exposed to these sounds." NASA uses cameras with special filters (hydrogen alpha) to capture images of how supersonic planes move through the air and create booms.Image: NASAThe X-Plane tests will fly over large 50-square-mile areas, giving NASA a diversity of Americans to survey about the low-booms they're hearing — and if they notice them at all. Today, civilian supersonic flights over land are banned. But once NASA gets feedback from the public, this information can be used to not just advise plane manufacturers in the U.S. of how to build low-boom planes, but engineers all over the world. "One thing we hope this data will give the international community is that noise level," said Coen. "If your airplane produces less than X [sound decibels], it's okay to fly over land." WATCH: NASA needs you to send them pictures of clouds |
Fiji PM warns of 'frightening new era' as he blames deadly cyclone on climate change Posted: 03 Apr 2018 07:26 AM PDT Fiji's prime minister has blamed climate change for a cyclone which killed five people and caused severe flooding, saying the Pacific nation is now under constant threat and has entered a "frightening new era". As authorities tried to restore power and water supplies across various islands, Frank Bainimarama said Fiji was facing a "fight for our very survival" and urged other countries to support efforts to tackle the causes of climate change. "We are now at an almost constant level of threat from these extreme weather events that are becoming more frequent and more severe because of climate change," he said. "As a nation we are starting to build our resilience in response to the frightening new era that is upon us." Cyclone Josie brought torrential rains and led to heavy flooding on the weekend. It came just six weeks after Cyclone Gita in February, which caused some property damage in Fiji but devastated Tonga, and two years after Cyclone Winston, which killed 44 people. Cyclone Josie crashed into Fiji on Easter Weekend, killing at least five people Credit: REUTERS Fiji and other small Pacific nations have led a desperate push for global action to combat climate change, saying that rising sea levels and intense weather events have already begun to make parts of their territory uninhabitable. Mr Bainimarama assumed a leading role in international climate talks last November when he served as president of the UN's COP23 negotiation in Bonn. Torrential rains and heavy flooding is becoming a recurring theme on the tiny Pacific islands Credit: REUTERS "We need to get the message out loud and clear to the entire world about the absolute need to confront this crisis head on," he said. Most scientists believe climate change will reduce the frequency of cyclones as temperature differences between the earth's surface and the atmosphere decrease. But it will lead to more intense cyclones – including higher wind speeds and greater rainfall - as warmer water temperatures add to overall precipitation and to the amount of energy at the water surface. Scientists believe cyclones are likely to become more intense in the region Credit: REUTERS Australia's Bureau of Meteorology said it was difficult to detect trends about cyclone intensity in the region because of a lack of consistent data. But it noted: "We may have fewer cyclones but the ones we do have will be stronger." Five places | threatened by climate change Professor James Renwick, an expert in atmospheric sciences at Victoria University of Wellington, told Radio New Zealand in February he expected cyclone intensity to increase because there will be "more energy in the climate system". "Warmer seas, warmer air - so when you have a tropical cyclone it's likely to be more intense," he said. Since the latest cyclone in Fiji, authorities have been clearing debris, restoring roads and assisting people who have taken shelter in dozens of evacuation centres. Bainimarama has long spoken out about climate change Credit: AFP/PHILIPPE LOPEZ Ranjana Devi, a mother of two, said her family was trapped in their house as the floodwaters smashed through their village and started rising in their home. She and her husband were in separate rooms – each with a son - and survived when their boys kicked through a window and opened a door to allow them to escape. "At one point it was me and my younger son Veron trapped in one room," she told the Fiji Sun. Families and business owners were left with a major clean-up job after the latest storms Credit: REUTERS "My husband and elder son Devan were trapped in the other room. It all happened so quickly. As the water rose, we knew we could have all died and what made it worse was the fact that we were separated and locked in different rooms." She added: "From here, we will rebuild and start all over. We have lost everything in this flood." |
Kaley Cuoco Explains Why Her Ex-Husband 'Ruined' Marriage For Her Posted: 04 Apr 2018 08:15 AM PDT |
N. Korea rights record likely off table at Korean summit: Seoul Posted: 03 Apr 2018 10:24 PM PDT Seoul's top diplomat said Wednesday that North Korea's human rights record is unlikely to be discussed at this month's summit, after Pyongyang denounced the South for supporting a fresh UN resolution against the North. North Korean leader Kim Jong Un and the South's president Moon Jae-in are due to meet for a rare inter-Korean summit on April 27. |
UK defense lab: No ID yet for source of nerve agent Posted: 03 Apr 2018 12:28 PM PDT |
Graphic Street Art Of Trump Shooting Schoolchildren Sparks Outcry Posted: 04 Apr 2018 02:54 AM PDT |
Syrian Kurdish leader signals possible joint action with Iraq Posted: 04 Apr 2018 07:40 AM PDT By Tom Perry BEIRUT (Reuters) - A top Syrian Kurdish politician suggested on Wednesday that the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) and the Iraqi government could mount joint operations against Islamic State in the area on the border of the two countries. Aldar Xelil warned of a jihadist revival in eastern Syria, where operations by the U.S.-backed SDF have tapered off since they diverted fighters to the northwest to fight a Turkish offensive. "Iraq is a neighboring state and is also suffering from Daesh terrorism," he said in a telephone interview with Reuters, using the Arabic acronym for Islamic State. |
Architectural Digest, Bon Appetit & Le Coucou Celebrate the Arrival of Liebherr's Monolith Posted: 03 Apr 2018 12:35 PM PDT |
1 Elephant Died and 4 Others Were Hurt After a Circus Truck Crash Posted: 03 Apr 2018 07:23 AM PDT |
How Did a Miles-Long Crevice Appear in the Earth Overnight? Posted: 04 Apr 2018 10:35 AM PDT |
Civil jury says man responsible for woman's death at mansion Posted: 04 Apr 2018 01:25 PM PDT |
Betsy DeVos Mulls The Fate Of Guidance Designed To Reduce Racial Bias In Schools Posted: 04 Apr 2018 10:33 AM PDT |
Dashboard video shows Sacramento sheriff's car hit protester Posted: 02 Apr 2018 07:24 PM PDT |
A Trade War Could Cost The GOP At The Ballot Box Posted: 04 Apr 2018 11:32 AM PDT |
Russian rocket tests force partial closing of Baltic Sea, airspace Posted: 04 Apr 2018 01:42 PM PDT By Gederts Gelzis RIGA (Reuters) - Russia began testing missiles with live munitions in the Baltic Sea on Wednesday, alarming Latvia, a member of NATO, which says the drills have forced it partly to shut down Baltic commercial airspace. The Russian defense ministry said on Monday that its Baltic Fleet, based in its European exclave of Kaliningrad, was preparing for routine training in the Baltic Sea, including live fire drills to practice hitting air and sea targets. "It is a demonstration of force," Latvia's Prime Minister Maris Kucinskis told Reuters. |
Harley-Davidson Recalls 250,000 Bikes for Faulty Brakes Posted: 03 Apr 2018 10:53 AM PDT |
Gun safety advocates seek to override Rauner's veto of gun dealer license measure Posted: 03 Apr 2018 09:58 AM PDT |
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