Yahoo! News: World - China
Yahoo! News: World - China |
- Kris Kobach's Lead In Kansas Governor's Race Shrinks After Vote Count Discrepancy
- Former Virginia governor remembers troopers who died in Charlottesville
- Venezuelan migrants throng Ecuador-Colombia border high up in Andes
- Joe Arpaio Gives Wild Explanation For Trainwreck Sacha Baron Cohen Interview
- Gates, star witness against Manafort, concludes testimony
- U.S. Marines Name First-Ever Female Infantry Platoon Commander
- Running against Bernie in 2020: It's easier than you think
- Steph Curry Helps Raise More Than $21,000 For Nia Wilson's Family
- Death toll rises to 259 from Sunday's quake in Indonesia's Lombok island
- Alex Jones' 'Free Speech' Shouldn't Be Your Primary Concern
- Mother Orca Spotted Carrying Dead Calf For 17th Day
- Man at compound accused of training kids for school attacks
- White House announces Space Force, but don't try to enlist just yet
- Florida Tourist Dies After Being Punched by Man He Apparently Mistook for Uber Driver
- On Istanbul streets, defiant Turks see U.S. hand behind lira crisis
- Kris Kobach Says He'll Remove Himself From Overseeing Kansas Primary Vote Count
- Air Force releases footage of soldier's final fight
- Could Ford and Volkswagen Co-Develop a Pickup Truck? That Rumor Explained
- The Latest: School district defends its response to massacre
- Afghans return home in record numbers as Iran currency plunges
- The Funniest Tweets From Parents This Week (August 4-10)
- Melania Trump's Parents Likely Became U.S. Citizens Through 'Chain Migration' Donald Trump Blasts
- As Mollie Tibbetts Search Enters 4th Week, a Look at Other Cases of Women Gone Missing
- Tourists could be made to file past Rome's Trevi Fountain on one-way route in bid to control overcrowding
- The US government said 64 people died in Puerto Rico after Hurricane Maria – the total could be over 1,400
- The Only iPhone Cable You'll Ever Need Is 62% Off
- 'Talking Dead' Staffers Protest Chris Hardwick's Return To AMC By Quitting
- Facebook fight between 'keyboard gangsters' ends in shooting
- Iran test-fired anti-ship missile during drills last week: U.S. source
- Wildfire smoke from California has reached New York City, 3,000 miles away
- Baby Survives After Ohio Mom Gives Birth at Burger King While Allegedly Overdosing on Heroin: Report
- Sex scandal at American 'megachurch' causes leaders to quit after ten women accuse founder
- Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez Asks Why U.S. Funds 'Unlimited War' But Not 'Medicare For All'
- Alt-Right Site Gab Says Microsoft Threatening Shutdown Over Anti-Semitic Posts
- Thailand Grants Citizenship to Stateless Boys and Their Coach Rescued From a Cave
- The 83 Most Delish S'mores Ideas
- Yemen's Shiite rebels welcome UN call for Saudi strike probe
- Manafort trial - live updates: Robert Mueller's team ask Rick Gates discussion to be kept secret to protect Russia investigation
- Don Lemon Taunts Donald Trump Over Broken 'Hiring The Best People' Vow
- Mollie Tibbetts latest: Frustration builds as police stay mum on missing Iowa woman
- Father, Son Charged With Killing Mother Bear And 'Shrieking' Cubs In Their Den
Kris Kobach's Lead In Kansas Governor's Race Shrinks After Vote Count Discrepancy Posted: 09 Aug 2018 02:13 PM PDT |
Former Virginia governor remembers troopers who died in Charlottesville Posted: 10 Aug 2018 03:00 AM PDT |
Venezuelan migrants throng Ecuador-Colombia border high up in Andes Posted: 09 Aug 2018 01:23 PM PDT Impoverished Venezuelans are fleeing food shortages, hyperinflation, and violent crime in their homeland, often taking days-long bus rides across South America because they cannot afford flights. Ecuador's government on Wednesday declared a state of emergency in three provinces due to a jump in Venezuelans who arrived through Colombia. Authorities said up to 4,500 Venezuelans had crossed daily since the weekend, up from around 500 to 1,000 people previously. |
Joe Arpaio Gives Wild Explanation For Trainwreck Sacha Baron Cohen Interview Posted: 10 Aug 2018 01:16 PM PDT |
Gates, star witness against Manafort, concludes testimony Posted: 08 Aug 2018 07:29 PM PDT |
U.S. Marines Name First-Ever Female Infantry Platoon Commander Posted: 10 Aug 2018 12:11 PM PDT |
Running against Bernie in 2020: It's easier than you think Posted: 09 Aug 2018 02:00 AM PDT |
Steph Curry Helps Raise More Than $21,000 For Nia Wilson's Family Posted: 09 Aug 2018 08:08 AM PDT |
Death toll rises to 259 from Sunday's quake in Indonesia's Lombok island Posted: 09 Aug 2018 03:59 AM PDT The number of confirmed deaths from a strong earthquake that hit the Indonesian island of Lombok on Sunday has risen to 259 and would rise as more victims are found in the rubble, the disaster mitigation agency said. This number will continue increasing as rescue teams continue to find victims under collapsed buildings," the agency said in a statement on Thursday. |
Alex Jones' 'Free Speech' Shouldn't Be Your Primary Concern Posted: 09 Aug 2018 09:23 AM PDT |
Mother Orca Spotted Carrying Dead Calf For 17th Day Posted: 09 Aug 2018 09:53 PM PDT |
Man at compound accused of training kids for school attacks Posted: 08 Aug 2018 06:04 PM PDT |
White House announces Space Force, but don't try to enlist just yet Posted: 09 Aug 2018 02:02 PM PDT |
Florida Tourist Dies After Being Punched by Man He Apparently Mistook for Uber Driver Posted: 09 Aug 2018 07:59 AM PDT |
On Istanbul streets, defiant Turks see U.S. hand behind lira crisis Posted: 10 Aug 2018 08:13 AM PDT |
Kris Kobach Says He'll Remove Himself From Overseeing Kansas Primary Vote Count Posted: 09 Aug 2018 08:40 PM PDT |
Air Force releases footage of soldier's final fight Posted: 10 Aug 2018 03:40 AM PDT |
Could Ford and Volkswagen Co-Develop a Pickup Truck? That Rumor Explained Posted: 09 Aug 2018 10:22 AM PDT |
The Latest: School district defends its response to massacre Posted: 09 Aug 2018 01:54 PM PDT |
Afghans return home in record numbers as Iran currency plunges Posted: 09 Aug 2018 03:19 AM PDT Migrant workers squeezed into battered taxis pull into the Four Seasons of Freedom hotel in western Afghanistan, part of a wave of Afghans forced to leave Iran after a currency implosion wiped out their earnings. A record 442,344 Afghans have voluntarily returned or been deported from Iran this year as looming US sanctions -- which began to be reimposed this week -- fuelled a run on the rial and spurred inflation. Iran's currency has lost around half of its value against the dollar since US President Donald Trump abandoned a landmark 2015 nuclear deal in May, triggering a reimposition of tough penalties on the Islamic republic. |
The Funniest Tweets From Parents This Week (August 4-10) Posted: 10 Aug 2018 06:01 AM PDT |
Posted: 09 Aug 2018 03:13 PM PDT |
As Mollie Tibbetts Search Enters 4th Week, a Look at Other Cases of Women Gone Missing Posted: 09 Aug 2018 08:54 AM PDT |
Posted: 09 Aug 2018 06:53 AM PDT Tourists could be made to file past the Trevi Fountain on a designated pathway rather than linger at their leisure as officials in Rome warn that overcrowding at the monument has got out of hand. The Baroque monument was catapulted to fame by the 1960 film La Dolce Vita but the days when visitors could admire it in relative solitude – let alone wade into waist-deep it as Anita Ekberg did in the Federico Fellini classic – are long gone. Nowadays the fountain, and the piazza in which it is located, is packed with tourists night and day. Visitors clamber over the flanks of the imposing monument, drop melting ice cream on its travertine stone and dangle their feet in the water to cool off during the summer months. The tourist hordes attract a small army of itinerant vendors peddling selfie sticks, postcards and fridge magnets, as well as street artists dressed as Roman centurions and legionaries. "We're looking at the idea of having a route which would allow tourists to see the Trevi Fountain but without stopping," Andrea Coia, a city councilor, told La Repubblica newspaper. The aim would be to replace the current free-for-all with controlled access to the fountain Credit: Maremagnum The aim would be to replace the current free-for-all with controlled access to the fountain, "because the situation has become unlivable", said Mr Coia, a member of the populist Five Star Movement. A similar proposal was trialed last July but dropped a couple of months later. If revived on a permanent basis, the city would deploy police officers to make sure visitors stick to the route and walk in the same direction. There might just be time to toss a coin into the water over the left shoulder – a popular ritual that supposedly guarantees you will return to the Eternal City one day. A woman tosses a coin into the Trevi fountain in Rome. Legend has it that tossing a coin over one's shoulder into the fountain ensures a return visit Credit: Gregorio Borgia/AP Sabrina Alfonsi, a municipal representative, cautiously welcomed the idea but said the piazza needed to remain accessible to local residents. "It needs to be a piazza that belongs to the whole city, a living place," she said. Celebrated as one of Rome's must-see attractions, the Trevi Fountain also proves irresistible to drunks, exhibitionists and sweaty tourists longing for a refreshing dip during the torrid heat of the summer. Two years ago, a British woman named Delilah Jay waded into the fountain in an evening dress, in imitation of Ms Ekberg's scene with Italian heartthrob Marcello Mastroianni in La Dolce Vita. She blew kisses to crowds of tourists but was then apprehended by police officers and fined €450. A police officer tells tourists not to eat or sit on the rim of the fountain Credit: EPA In March, two Scottish rugby fans were each fined €450 after celebrating Scotland's victory over Italy in the Six Nations tournament by plunging into the fountain. The men, one of whom was wearing a kilt as he performed a leisurely breast-stroke through the frigid water, were also hauled out by police. Consisting of a grand central arch, marble pillars and allegorical figures surrounded by gushing water, the Trevi Fountain was completed in 1762 after 30 years of work. Standing at the centre of the whole tableau is a statue of the god Oceanus commanding a chariot pulled by horses. |
Posted: 09 Aug 2018 09:40 AM PDT Flanked by Puerto Rican officials at a conference nearly two weeks after disaster struck the island, Donald Trump told locals to be "thankful" for Hurricane Maria's death count. The US government has quietly walked back the president's statements since then, adding onto an ever-increasing number of deaths related to the catastrophic hurricane. The report acknowledges 1,427 people were killed after Hurricane Maria ripped through Puerto Rico, while detailing a $139bn reconstruction plan for the island that has yet to fully recover. |
The Only iPhone Cable You'll Ever Need Is 62% Off Posted: 09 Aug 2018 11:45 AM PDT |
'Talking Dead' Staffers Protest Chris Hardwick's Return To AMC By Quitting Posted: 10 Aug 2018 03:40 PM PDT |
Facebook fight between 'keyboard gangsters' ends in shooting Posted: 10 Aug 2018 08:31 AM PDT |
Iran test-fired anti-ship missile during drills last week: U.S. source Posted: 10 Aug 2018 02:45 PM PDT Iran test-fired a short-range anti-ship missile in the Strait of Hormuz during naval drills last week that Washington believes were aimed at sending a message as the United States reimposes sanctions on Tehran, a U.S. official said on Friday. The official, however, did not suggest that such a missile test was unusual during naval exercises or that it was carried out unsafely, noting it occurred in what could be described as Iranian territorial waters in the Strait. Iran's Revolutionary Guards confirmed on Sunday it had held war games in the Gulf over the past several days, saying they were aimed at "confronting possible threats" by enemies. |
Wildfire smoke from California has reached New York City, 3,000 miles away Posted: 09 Aug 2018 10:04 AM PDT Anthony Wexler, the director of the Air Quality Research Center at the University of California, Davis, packed his bags and drove his family out to the coast. They're escaping the smoke. Davis, California, sits amid a layer of wildfire smoke in Northern California. To the northwest, the largest fire in state history, the Mendocino Complex Fire, continues to burn. To the southeast, the Ferguson Fire has closed down smoke-choked Yosemite National Park indefinitely. And to the North, the Carr Fire, infamous for its towering fire tornado, still burns. SEE ALSO: California just had its hottest month on record, and that means more wildfires The air quality in the region around the fires — whose spread has been enhanced by extreme heat parching the land — is some of the worst in the world. "I decided to go out to the coast for a couple days because it was so ridiculous," Wexler said. On Wednesday, the National Weather Service illustrated how winds have lifted bounties of smoke across the entire U.S., bringing pollution even beyond the East Coast. Smoke from the western fires is making it all the way to the East Coast and beyond (at least aloft—mostly above a mile above the surface). Here's the vertically integrated smoke (HRRR model from last night). Another map showed some smoke near the surface even in New England. pic.twitter.com/0Jl6WDAFjg — NWS San Diego (@NWSSanDiego) August 8, 2018 That said, it's not as if these smoke particles are harmful to those on the East Coast. By the time that smoke arrives in Boston and New York, the particles have been diluted with fresh air, and certainly can't be seen, nor are concentrations unhealthy. It's normal for pollution to waft from west to east across the country, just like pollution from China is regularly transported over the Pacific Ocean into the U.S. That's how air generally moves over the Northern Hemisphere, said Wexler. But it's much rarer for even low concentrations of smoke to find their way across the nation. "It doesn't happen every day," Gabriele Pfister, deputy director of the National Center of Atmospheric Research's atmospheric chemistry lab, said in an interview. "But, it can happen." "Normally, the pollution isn't so great that it's noticeable when it gets east," added Wexler. This isn't stratus this morning looking west from the @LickObservatory, it's smoke. #CAwx pic.twitter.com/dcAMDwShCG — NWS Bay Area (@NWSBayArea) August 7, 2018 But just how bad is the air pollution in large regions of the West? "It's been like a reasonably decent day in Beijing," said Wexler. "That's really telling. It's really awful there." "It's unbelievable," said Pfister. She noted that planes flying over the area, as part of a National Science Foundation-funded wildfire study, have picked up some alarming pollution numbers. It's expected that particulate matter — tiny fragments of pollution 30 times thinner than a human hair — would be bad. But the flights even picked up abnormally high concentrations of carbon monoxide, an odorless gas that can be dangerous to human health in enclosed spaces, and at worse, lethal. However, some of the measured values around the fires are about 5 parts per million, or ppm, which are not considered nearly dangerous — but it's still telling. The amount of smoke over the West tonight is nothing short of astounding. pic.twitter.com/Mya0rZauMl — Dan Satterfield (@wildweatherdan) August 8, 2018 "These are values you don't typically find near the surface in the U.S.," said Pfister. "Maybe you'll find that if you stick your head into the exhaust of a car." It's not carbon monoxide, however, that people in burning regions need to be concerned about. One of the main factors that's figured into air quality ratings is particulate matter. Both U.S. government and university researchers have repeatedly shown that breathing this stuff is bad for your heart, as it accelerates plaque build-up in blood vessels. In some areas of Oregon, the Air Quality Index currently registers as "Hazardous." In Redding, California, where a fire tornado spun for 80 minutes last week, the air quality is rated as "Unhealthy." But out near the windswept coast, like in San Francisco, the air quality is "Good." Here is what the #smoke looked like over the Central Valley and affecting #AirQuality today. Deep smoke up to 10,000 feet AGL with multiple layers of smoke caused by transport of different #wildfire plumes. Thanks to @MBrewerWX @weather_jack #MendocinoComplexFire #CarrFire pic.twitter.com/aOlNqLLJNV — SJSU FireWeatherLab (@FireWeatherLab) August 9, 2018 It's likely that the West will be intermittently blanketed in unhealthy to hazardous air for months ahead, as the fire season is not nearly over. Rains aren't expected for months, and more temperature and fire records might be broken. Many Westerners aren't near the fires themselves. But it's harder to outrun the smoke. "In my experience, it's never been this bad," said Wexler. WATCH: A tick is spreading and making people allergic to beef |
Baby Survives After Ohio Mom Gives Birth at Burger King While Allegedly Overdosing on Heroin: Report Posted: 10 Aug 2018 09:27 AM PDT |
Sex scandal at American 'megachurch' causes leaders to quit after ten women accuse founder Posted: 09 Aug 2018 09:45 AM PDT One of America's largest "megachurches" has been rocked by a sex scandal which has seen its entire senior leadership team quit. Willow Creek Church's founder, Bill Hybels, was accused of sexual misconduct several years ago but was privately cleared of wrongdoing by the church elders. He was forced to step down earlier this year when the historical allegations became public. Mr Hybels has denied any wrongdoing but said he had become a distraction from the church. Since then, more women have come forward to claim they were harassed by the church founder. The new revelations over the weekend led the church's leaders to admit they had failed to handle the claims appropriately. In a statement, the church elders announced they would all be standing down, saying a "new start" was needed. "We trusted Bill, and this clouded our judgment," one elder, Missy Rasmussen, told the congregation. Church leaders did not move quickly enough to secure Mr Hybels' electronic devices, she said. Ms Rasmussen said the church elders had "no reason not to believe" the ten women who have accused the church founder of sexual misconduct. A pastor can be seen projected on several televisions in one 7,000-seat Willow Creek Community church in Illinois Credit: Reuters Willow Creek is thought to be the fifth largest "megachurch" in the US with more than 25,000 members and locations across Chicago. "Megachurches" are defined as congregations with at least 2,000 people in regular weekly attendance. The allegations against Mr Hybels by a string of women date back to the 1990s but only became public when The Chicago Tribune and Christianity Today broke the story earlier this year. The papers detailed claims of unwanted advances and suggestive comments to church members. The church's leaders were reportedly told four years ago that Mr Hybels was having an affair with one woman and was accused of harassment by others. An internal investigation cleared him of wrongdoing. But in April, after the allegations came to light, Mr Hybels announced he would step down months ahead of his planned retirement in October. His announcement brought gasps from his congregation. New allegations emerged in recent days, with Mr Hybels' former assistant alleging he groped her repeatedly. The church's entire leadership have now quit over the church's handling of the misconduct allegations. In their statement, church elders said investigations had been "flawed" and that their trust in Willow Creek's founder had "clouded our judgement". "We, as a board, know Willow needs and deserves a fresh start, and the entire board will step down to create room for a new board," it said. The church's lead pastor, Heather Larson. who also stepped down, said trust in the church's leadership had been broken and urgently needed to "move in a better direction". The megachurch had been due to host a summit of hundreds of churches, but dozens have pulled out since the announcement on Wednesday. Willow Creek's new lead pastor, Steve Gillen, has pledged to commission an independent review of the church's leadership. |
Posted: 09 Aug 2018 08:03 AM PDT |
Alt-Right Site Gab Says Microsoft Threatening Shutdown Over Anti-Semitic Posts Posted: 09 Aug 2018 11:06 AM PDT |
Thailand Grants Citizenship to Stateless Boys and Their Coach Rescued From a Cave Posted: 08 Aug 2018 06:44 PM PDT |
The 83 Most Delish S'mores Ideas Posted: 09 Aug 2018 04:28 PM PDT |
Yemen's Shiite rebels welcome UN call for Saudi strike probe Posted: 10 Aug 2018 12:06 PM PDT |
Posted: 09 Aug 2018 02:36 PM PDT After three days of dramatic testimony in the trial of Paul Manafort,, prosecutors returned on Thursday to the nuts and bolts of their case against Donald Trump's former campaign chairman as they sought to show he obtained millions of dollars in bank loans under false pretenses. Attorneys for special counsel Robert Mueller also got a rare — and narrow — acknowledgement from Judge TS Ellis III that he likely erred when he angrily confronted them a day earlier over whether he had allowed a witness to watch the trial. The judge's comments and detailed testimony about Mr Manafort's loans opened the eighth day of his trial as prosecutors began presenting the bulk of their bank fraud case against him after spending days largely on tax-evasion allegations. |
Don Lemon Taunts Donald Trump Over Broken 'Hiring The Best People' Vow Posted: 09 Aug 2018 03:44 AM PDT |
Mollie Tibbetts latest: Frustration builds as police stay mum on missing Iowa woman Posted: 09 Aug 2018 08:25 AM PDT |
Father, Son Charged With Killing Mother Bear And 'Shrieking' Cubs In Their Den Posted: 10 Aug 2018 01:41 AM PDT |
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