Yahoo! News: Education News
Yahoo! News: Education News |
- Realtor Who Vanished During Harvey Found Dead, Ex-Husband Arrested
- U.S Military Begins Evacuations From St. Martin After Irma Destruction
- Seth Rogen is 'drunk in Orlando' as Hurricane Irma looms ahead
- Iconic 9/11 images: 16 years later
- Hurricane Irma Starts Raking Miami
- Hillary Clinton Rules Out Seeking Office Again, But Remains Committed To Public Service
- Wildfire smoke clearing in US West as storms move through
- Venezuela to sell oil in currencies other than dollar
- Dad Dies Trying to Protect His 2-Year-Old From Carjackers: 'We Blindly Lost a Beautiful Soul'
- Trump says churches should get FEMA funds for hurricane relief
- Mar-A-Lago Has A Flood Insurance Policy Through The Federal Government
- 7-Eleven Offers Free Water To Floridians After Accusations of Price Gouging
- Tiffany & Co. Collaborates with Reed Krakoff
- Councils failing to stop people giving away cash to dodge care home fees
- Equifax Clarifies Policy After Outcry Over Consumers' Legal Rights Following Hack
- Top Asian News 3:32 a.m. GMT
- Pope vies with narco for reverence in Colombian city
- Hurricane Irma batters Florida Keys
- Bristol's drug cocktail cuts kidney cancer death risk 37 percent
- A Devastating Hurricane Season Exposes America’s Flood Insurance Problem
- After Irma, Tim Duncan Pens Emotional Plea: 'Don't Forget' The U.S. Virgin Islands
- The Latest: Pemex: Fuel supplies stable despite quake, storm
- FBI probing Utah cop who arrested nurse for refusing to draw blood
- The Reason Zayn Malik Shaved His Head Is Actually Pretty Common
- Saudi suspends dialogue after Qatar outreach
- Lorry-stopping 'super stinger' spiked net unveiled to protect crowds against terror attacks
- 'Reclaiming My Time' Gospel Song Is Now A Suicide Prevention Anthem
- This Is How You Can Volunteer to Help When Hurricane Irma Hits Florida
- The Latest: Classes suspended in 2 Mexico states after quake
- Eric Bolling's 19-Year-Old Son Found Dead
- Best Portable Gas Grills for Tailgating
- Russia berates German defense minister for war games remarks
- Forgetting Westgate: how Kenya erases terrorism
- Egypt archaeologists unearth 3,500-year-old tomb in Luxor
- Bill Maher Sat Down With Ken Bone To Find Out Who He Voted For
- Georgia Man Holds Cookout For Florida Evacuees Near Highway: 'It Was Beautiful'
- U.S. Senator McCain says facing 'very vicious form of cancer'
- A text from Keys: 'Getting worse. Water n winds, whiteout'
- 'Anti-Semitic' robbers target Jewish family near Paris
- 21 Seriously Game-Changing Thanksgiving Cakes
- Football Season Demands a Big-Game TV Tune-up
- Mueller tells White House of six aides he wishes to quiz in Russia inquiry – report
- Leslie Jones Just Couldn't Contain Herself During New York Fashion Week
- 'It's All Hands on Deck.' Inside Miami's Hurricane Response Hub
- Canada deported hundreds to war-torn countries: government data
- Josh Gad Thanks Frozen Costar Kristen Bell for 'Literally Saving' His Family From Hurricane Irma
Realtor Who Vanished During Harvey Found Dead, Ex-Husband Arrested Posted: 09 Sep 2017 01:08 PM PDT |
U.S Military Begins Evacuations From St. Martin After Irma Destruction Posted: 09 Sep 2017 09:33 PM PDT |
Seth Rogen is 'drunk in Orlando' as Hurricane Irma looms ahead Posted: 09 Sep 2017 09:26 PM PDT |
Iconic 9/11 images: 16 years later Posted: 10 Sep 2017 04:00 AM PDT |
Hurricane Irma Starts Raking Miami Posted: 10 Sep 2017 09:25 AM PDT |
Hillary Clinton Rules Out Seeking Office Again, But Remains Committed To Public Service Posted: 10 Sep 2017 09:16 AM PDT |
Wildfire smoke clearing in US West as storms move through Posted: 09 Sep 2017 12:37 PM PDT |
Venezuela to sell oil in currencies other than dollar Posted: 08 Sep 2017 11:14 PM PDT Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro announced Friday his government will sell oil and other commodities in currencies other than the dollar, in a bid to weather US-imposed sanctions on the embattled country. "I have decided to start selling oil, gas, gold and all other products that Venezuela sells with new currencies, including the Chinese yuan, the Japanese yen, the Russian ruble, the Indian rupee among others," he said during a television broadcast. The goal is to restrict Venezuela's access to vital bond and equity markets. |
Posted: 09 Sep 2017 10:31 AM PDT |
Trump says churches should get FEMA funds for hurricane relief Posted: 08 Sep 2017 06:56 PM PDT President Donald Trump said on Friday that churches in Texas should be able to receive money from the Federal Emergency Management Agency for helping victims of Hurricane Harvey. Trump tweeted: "Churches in Texas should be entitled to reimbursement from FEMA Relief Funds for helping victims of Hurricane Harvey (just like others)". Trump's tweet followed a lawsuit filed by three Texas Churches seeking federal aid to repair severe damage to their structures by Harvey. |
Mar-A-Lago Has A Flood Insurance Policy Through The Federal Government Posted: 09 Sep 2017 06:24 AM PDT |
7-Eleven Offers Free Water To Floridians After Accusations of Price Gouging Posted: 08 Sep 2017 08:26 PM PDT |
Tiffany & Co. Collaborates with Reed Krakoff Posted: 09 Sep 2017 05:00 AM PDT |
Councils failing to stop people giving away cash to dodge care home fees Posted: 10 Sep 2017 12:22 AM PDT Families are facing a care funding lottery as new figures reveal wide variations in the lengths to which councils will go to stop people giving away assets in an attempt to make the state pay instead. Local authorities means-test residents of care homes to check if they should pay towards their costs. The cut off point is £23,250 – if you have assets above this figure you are expected to fund your own care. If your assets are worth less than £23,250 the council will help to meet the costs. Average nursing home costs reached £1,000 for "self-funders" earlier this year. The spiralling cost of care has created an incentive for families to give away property, investments and savings to bring their assets below the £23,250 limit. Councils have powers to claw back money from people it can prove to have "deliberately deprived" themselves of assets to claim state aid. Yet it has long been suspected that they find it nearly impossible to prove that someone has given assets away deliberately to dodge care costs. 'I reclaimed £226,559 in care fees. Here's how you can too' Giving to children and grandchildren as a way to limit inheritance tax bills has become increasingly common. High house prices and buoyant stock markets have increased families' wealth, while the headline amount you can pass on tax free has not been increased for nearly a decade. A series of Freedom of Information requests submitted by Telegraph Money has uncovered how often councils use their powers and the amounts they have managed to claw back. Of the eight local authorities approached, North Somerset council, whose jurisdiction includes Weston-super-Mare and the outskirts of Bristol, had used its powers the most. Since 2012 it recorded 64 "deprivation" cases in relation to care funding. The total value of assets involved in the cases was £1.3m. By contrast, the London borough of Westminster had no recorded cases. This is despite the area having a similar population to North Somerset, at around 200,000, and a similar proportion of elderly residents. At a glance | Who use deprivation rules Likewise Southwark, which covers a large part of south-east London, had not used its powers at all. The north London borough of Camden had the second-highest number of cases, at 14, with a total value of £158,000 over five years. Liverpool and Hertfordshire councils refused to provide figures on the grounds of cost, while Nottingham City Council said it did not keep relevant records. Steven Cameron, a care expert at Aegon, the insurer, warned that greater scrutiny of the sector meant individuals who attempted to dodge care fees were increasingly likely to be caught by councils. "A few years ago it was highly unlikely that a council would have paid much attention to people who gave away assets to avoid paying," he said. "But with the care crisis getting worse daily and with more public interest in getting out of paying for care by giving away assets, the attention councils will pay is certain to increase considerably." Councils also take action that may not be reflected by official statistics, said Tracy Ashby a specialist legacy planner at Thursfields, the law firm. In a nutshell | How care home funding works She has seen cases in the West Midlands where instead of trying to claw back funds from families, councils simply cut off funding for care. Care homes are then left to pursue families themselves and in some cases have sought to evict patients, Ms Ashby said. The "dementia tax" Telegraph Money has reported extensively on the anomalies of the care funding system. Self-funding patients effectively subsidise those funded by councils, which set strict limits on the fees they are prepared to pay. This leaves homes in areas with few private customers battling to stay open. The Conservatives' radical plans for reforming the care system have been blamed for the party's disastrous showing in the general election. Under the plan, councils would have started to pick up the tab for care costs once a person's assets fell below £100,000, as opposed to the current level of £23,250 in England. But, crucially, family homes would also have been included in the means-testing formula for "at home" care for the first time. At the same time, the plan for a lifetime cap – which would have helped those who needed long periods of care – was dropped. The Tories quickly backtracked over the latter, which Labour called the "dementia tax". How to connect with us | Telegraph Money on social media |
Equifax Clarifies Policy After Outcry Over Consumers' Legal Rights Following Hack Posted: 08 Sep 2017 11:33 PM PDT |
Posted: 09 Sep 2017 08:32 PM PDT COX'S BAZAR, Bangladesh (AP) — Rohingya insurgents, whose attack on Myanmar security forces last month triggered savage military reprisals, declared a monthlong truce Sunday as refugees continued to flood across the border into Bangladesh only to face scant basic resources, hunger and illness. The Muslim insurgents of the Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army issued the truce statement on its Twitter account and urged Myanmar's government to reciprocate in order to assist all victims regardless of their background. The government did not comment immediately. The rebels, who say they're fighting to protect their minority members against government-sponsored persecution, launched their first known attacks last October and again on Aug. |
Pope vies with narco for reverence in Colombian city Posted: 09 Sep 2017 07:40 PM PDT Medellín (Colombia) (AFP) - In her hair salon, Yamile Zapata is taking advantage of Pope Francis's visit to sell key rings with his face on it. While Francis was ministering and teaching as a Jesuit priest in the 1980s, Escobar was killing hundreds of people and trafficking billions of dollars' worth of hard drugs. |
Hurricane Irma batters Florida Keys Posted: 10 Sep 2017 08:42 AM PDT |
Bristol's drug cocktail cuts kidney cancer death risk 37 percent Posted: 10 Sep 2017 10:21 AM PDT By Ben Hirschler MADRID (Reuters) - A combination of two Bristol-Myers Squibb immunotherapy drugs cut the risk of death by 37 percent in a key group of kidney cancer patients, data from a closely watched clinical trial showed on Sunday. In August, Bristol-Myers reported Opdivo and Yervoy failed to significantly outperform standard care in checking cancer progression, although there was a trend toward benefit. |
A Devastating Hurricane Season Exposes America’s Flood Insurance Problem Posted: 09 Sep 2017 07:37 AM PDT |
After Irma, Tim Duncan Pens Emotional Plea: 'Don't Forget' The U.S. Virgin Islands Posted: 10 Sep 2017 04:28 AM PDT |
The Latest: Pemex: Fuel supplies stable despite quake, storm Posted: 08 Sep 2017 08:28 PM PDT |
FBI probing Utah cop who arrested nurse for refusing to draw blood Posted: 09 Sep 2017 11:13 AM PDT |
The Reason Zayn Malik Shaved His Head Is Actually Pretty Common Posted: 08 Sep 2017 06:03 PM PDT |
Saudi suspends dialogue after Qatar outreach Posted: 08 Sep 2017 07:06 PM PDT Saudi Arabia on Saturday suspended any dialogue with Qatar, accusing it of distorting facts soon after a phone call between the rulers of both countries offered hope of a breakthrough in the three-month-old Gulf crisis. Qatar's emir, Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al-Thani, spoke to Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman to express interest in talks, state media from both sides said, in the first public engagement between the leaders after the US president offered to mediate in the crisis. Saudi Arabia led the United Arab Emirates, Egypt and Bahrain in cutting ties with Qatar in June, accusing it of bankrolling Islamist extremist groups and of being too close to regional rival Iran. |
Posted: 10 Sep 2017 07:30 AM PDT A spiked net designed to stop a terrorist lorry attack in its tracks has been unveiled by Scotland Yard to protect large public gatherings in the capital. The heavy net bristling with tungsten steel spikes can stop and trap a vehicle weighing up to 17-tons and was used for the first time to protect the Naval Associations Parade in Central London. The Met Police said the device could be laid out in less than a minute and halts even heavy vehicles by puncturing their front tyres and then becoming entangled in their wheels. The device can entangle and stop a 17-ton lorry Credit: JULIAN SIMMONDS Protecting crowds from the prospect of a ramming attack has become a police priority after Islamist jihadists have used vehicles to plough into pedestrians in a string of atrocities in Britain and on the Continent. The device, known as Talon, was laid out on Whitehall on Sunday morning as hundreds of Royal Navy sailors and veterans paraded in front of the Cenotaph. The device was used for the first time to protect a Naval Associations Parade Credit: JULIAN SIMMONDS A spokeswoman for the Met Police said: "The system is also designed to ensure that the vehicle skids in a straight line, significantly reducing risk to crowds and producing a well controlled stop after which officers can engage with the driver. "When the equipment is deployed, signs are placed in front and behind the net site advising both road users and pedestrians that there are spikes on the road and to follow instructions provided by officers." She said the device "is likely to become a familiar sight at events that attract large crowds in London". Both Islamic State and al-Qaeda have called on their followers to carry out vehicle ramming attacks. Hundreds of sailors and veterans paraded at the Cenotaph in central London to honour modern Naval heroes Credit: Julian Simmonds Mohamed Lahouaiej-Bouhlel killed 86 in Nice ploughing into crowds on Bastille Day 2016 and Anis Amri killed 12 ploughing into a Berlin Christmas market. Both the Westminster and London Bridge attackers in the UK began their killing sprees by running over pedestrians. Temporary steel and concrete barriers have already become common at public events in Britain's cities. Bollards and crash barriers to prevent vehicles being driven into crowds are also becoming a permanent feature of London tourist spots and have already been fitted to nine of the capital's bridges. Chief Inspector Nick Staley, of the Met's protective security operations unit, said: "This equipment undoubtedly has the potential to save lives and is just one of a number of measures being taken to provide protection to crowds attending major events in London and reassuring businesses, workers and visitors as they go about their daily lives." |
'Reclaiming My Time' Gospel Song Is Now A Suicide Prevention Anthem Posted: 10 Sep 2017 08:29 AM PDT |
This Is How You Can Volunteer to Help When Hurricane Irma Hits Florida Posted: 09 Sep 2017 10:48 AM PDT |
The Latest: Classes suspended in 2 Mexico states after quake Posted: 10 Sep 2017 03:15 PM PDT |
Eric Bolling's 19-Year-Old Son Found Dead Posted: 09 Sep 2017 11:31 AM PDT |
Best Portable Gas Grills for Tailgating Posted: 09 Sep 2017 09:19 AM PDT |
Russia berates German defense minister for war games remarks Posted: 09 Sep 2017 06:48 AM PDT Russia's Defence Ministry on Saturday criticized German Defence Minister Ursula von der Leyen, saying it was bewildered by her assertion that Moscow planned to send more than 100,000 troops to war games on NATO's eastern flank this month. On Thursday, the German defense minister said the war games, code named Zapad or "West", were a clear "demonstration of capabilities and power of the Russians". "Anyone who doubts that only has to look at the high numbers of participating forces in the Zapad exercise: more than one hundred thousand," von der Leyen told reporters at an EU defense ministers' meeting in Tallinn. |
Forgetting Westgate: how Kenya erases terrorism Posted: 08 Sep 2017 06:57 PM PDT On the inside Nairobi's Westgate mall is a shiny shopping centre, all sparkling glass shop fronts, Bose-conveyed muzak and boutiques stuffed with expensive imports. Two years after the mall reopened, Westgate remains glossy and new, as if nothing happened. "Westgate has been erased from the public imagination," says Patrick Gathara, a Kenyan cartoonist, blogger and curator of online publication The Elephant. |
Egypt archaeologists unearth 3,500-year-old tomb in Luxor Posted: 09 Sep 2017 07:08 AM PDT Egyptian archaeologists have uncovered the tomb of a goldsmith dedicated to the god Amun and the mummies of a woman and her two children, the antiquities ministry said on Saturday. The finds, dating back to the New Kingdom (16th to 11th centuries BC), were made in the Draa Abul Naga necropolis on the west bank of the Nile in Luxor, famed for its temples and burial grounds. The tomb of "Amun's Goldsmith, Amenemhat" contained a sculpture carved into a recess of him seated beside his wife, the ministry said. An Egyptian antiquities worker in the recently discovered tomb of Amenemhat Credit: Mohamed Abd El Ghany/Reuters A portrait of their son was painted between them. A burial shaft in the tomb led to a chamber where the archaeologists discovered mummies, funerary statues and masks, the ministry said. Another shaft led to a chamber where the team found the mummies of a woman and two children. An Egyptian archaeologist looks at a newly-uncovered sarcophagus in the Draa Abul Naga necropolis Credit: Egyptian Ministry of Antiquities via AFP The woman appears to have died at the age of 50 and tests showed she had suffered from a bacterial bone disease, the ministry quoted bone specialist Sherine Ahmed Shawqi as saying. The team also discovered 150 small funerary statues carved in wood, clay and limestone. A skull and a foot are seen in the recently discovered tomb of Amenemhat Credit: Mohamed Abd El Ghany/Reuters The tomb, located on the west bank of the river Nile in a cemetery for noblemen and top officials, is a relatively modest discovery, but one that authorities has announced with a great deal of fanfare in a bid to boost the country's slowly recovering tourism industry. "We want tomorrow's newspapers to speak about Egypt and make people want to come to Egypt," antiquities minister Khaled el-Anani told reporters. Egyptian archaeologist restoring a wooden sarcophagus at a newly-uncovered ancient tomb for a goldsmith in Luxor Credit: KHALED DESOUKI/AFP/Getty Images The tomb was discovered by Egyptian archeologists, something that a senior official at the antiquities ministry hailed as evidence of their growing professionalism and expertise. "We used to escort foreign archeologists as observers, but that's now in the past. We are the leaders now," said Mustafa Waziri, Luxor's chief archaeologist. |
Bill Maher Sat Down With Ken Bone To Find Out Who He Voted For Posted: 09 Sep 2017 12:21 AM PDT |
Georgia Man Holds Cookout For Florida Evacuees Near Highway: 'It Was Beautiful' Posted: 10 Sep 2017 11:40 AM PDT |
U.S. Senator McCain says facing 'very vicious form of cancer' Posted: 10 Sep 2017 08:46 AM PDT U.S. Senator John McCain, who recently returned to Washington after treatment for brain cancer, said on Sunday the disease is vicious but that the treatment is going well and he has more energy than before. "This is a very vicious form of cancer that I'm facing," McCain, a Republican who ran unsuccessfully for president in 2008, told CNN's "State of the Union" program. The 80-year-old Arizona senator was found to have an aggressive form of brain tumor, glioblastoma, after surgery in July for a blood clot above his left eye. |
A text from Keys: 'Getting worse. Water n winds, whiteout' Posted: 10 Sep 2017 05:18 PM PDT |
'Anti-Semitic' robbers target Jewish family near Paris Posted: 10 Sep 2017 01:00 PM PDT A Jewish family was beaten, held hostage and robbed in their home near Paris because of their religion, French authorities and anti-hate groups said Sunday. Three attackers burst into the house in the Paris suburb of Livry-Gargan late Thursday, cut off the electricity and confined three members of a Jewish family, beating them and threatening to kill them, until one of them managed to escape and alert the police, said anti-Semitism watchdog BNVCA. One of the victims was Roger Pinto, the 78-year-old head of Siona, an association "defending the Jewish people and the state of Israel," Pinto's lawyer, Marc Bensimon, said. |
21 Seriously Game-Changing Thanksgiving Cakes Posted: 09 Sep 2017 06:33 AM PDT |
Football Season Demands a Big-Game TV Tune-up Posted: 10 Sep 2017 06:23 AM PDT |
Mueller tells White House of six aides he wishes to quiz in Russia inquiry – report Posted: 09 Sep 2017 09:56 AM PDT Mueller's investigation is examining ties between Trump associates and Russian officials. Special counsel Robert Mueller has reportedly notified the White House that his team will try to seek interviews with six current and former aides to Donald Trump as part of the investigation into Russian meddling in the 2016 presidential election. |
Leslie Jones Just Couldn't Contain Herself During New York Fashion Week Posted: 09 Sep 2017 07:55 PM PDT |
'It's All Hands on Deck.' Inside Miami's Hurricane Response Hub Posted: 08 Sep 2017 08:40 PM PDT |
Canada deported hundreds to war-torn countries: government data Posted: 10 Sep 2017 09:33 AM PDT By Anna Mehler Paperny TORONTO (Reuters) - Canada has deported hundreds of people to countries designated too dangerous for civilians, with more than half of those people being sent back to Iraq, according to government data obtained by Reuters. The spike in deportations comes as Canada faces a record number of migrants and is on track to have the most refugee claims in more than a decade. Between January 2014 and Sept. 6, 2017, Canada sent 249 people to 11 countries for which the government had suspended or deferred deportations because of dangers to civilians. |
Posted: 09 Sep 2017 09:11 AM PDT |
You are subscribed to email updates from Yahoo News - Latest News & Headlines. To stop receiving these emails, you may unsubscribe now. | Email delivery powered by Google |
Google Inc., 1600 Amphitheatre Parkway, Mountain View, CA 94043, United States |
0 条评论:
发表评论
订阅 博文评论 [Atom]
<< 主页