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Yahoo! News: Education News |
- Before-And-After Photos Show How Florence Flooding Has Left Areas Unrecognizable
- London Mayor Pushes For Second Brexit Vote
- Death sentence for ex-doctor who killed 4 people in Nebraska
- These Photos Show The Devastation Caused By Hurricane Florence
- Shark kills man boogie boarding off Cape Cod beach as sightings increase
- Manafort’s capitulation leaves a wide-open field for Mueller’s team
- Bird's-eye abstraction: Iceland viewed from above
- American professor detained by Israel in West Bank scuffle
- Cardinal says women should train priests to fight abuse 'crisis'
- Humpback Whales Stun Onlookers With Incredible Triple Breach
- Hundreds of firefighters to head to Utah to fight wildfire
- Five deaths in mariachi plaza shootout pose test for Mexico's new government
- Florence death toll up at 11, including 3 killed by flooding
- GOP Donor Les Wexner Announces Departure From Republican Party After Obama Visit
- Ken Starr Says If President Trump Fires Robert Mueller 'There Would Be Hell To Pay'
- The BMW Vision iNext Is Autonomous and Frighteningly Intelligent
- Sex abuse claims rock Dutch Catholic Church
- Hungary's Orban comes out fighting after EU setback
- Before and after a storm, the supply stores are critical
- Photos and videos show the destruction and power of Florence
- Everyone wants answers: State, feds hunt for gas blast cause
- FEMA Boss Defends Trump's Puerto Rico Death Toll Denial: 'Numbers Are All Over The Place'
- Vice-Chancellors told to 'prioritise' mental health of students
- Archbishop of Washington prostrates himself at mass for abuse victims
- Polls open in Syrian local elections: state media
- Syria: Israel launched missile attack on Damascus airport
- London mayor calls for second referendum on Brexit: Observer
- Florence Flooding Breaches Makeshift Levee Reinforcement In North Carolina
- Dallas police face ire over portrayal of man shot by officer
- Tropical Storm Florence continues to flood roads and neighborhoods
- 87 Incredibly Easy Skillet Chicken Dinners
- Trump Says Democrats Are Playing GOP 'Like A Fiddle' On Border Wall
- The new vinegars: too good to splash on fish and chips
- Texas Board of Education Votes to Remove Hillary Clinton and Helen Keller from the State's Curriculum
- Seven hurt, one critically, in brawl in southeast English town
- Hundreds rescued from flooding in historic NC city
- Deluged by Hurricane Matthew, rural town waits for Florence
- Turkey-Russia discord over Idlib defers regime offensive, for now
- Man charged with killing 2 Arizona girls who went missing
- Michael Moore Thinks Donald Trump Or 'One Of His Minions' Wrote Anonymous NYT Op-Ed
- How to Wash a Pillow to Keep It Smelling Fresh
- Typhoon Mangkhut closes in on Hong Kong
- Combat Troops Have Been Complaining about the M4 And M16 for Years. Now The Pentagon Is Doing Something about It.
- Germany's Seehofer still optimistic about migrant deal with Italy
- NASA counts down to launch of laser study of ice sheets
- Rains from Florence cause collapse at NC coal ash landfill
Before-And-After Photos Show How Florence Flooding Has Left Areas Unrecognizable Posted: 15 Sep 2018 01:49 PM PDT |
London Mayor Pushes For Second Brexit Vote Posted: 16 Sep 2018 07:08 AM PDT |
Death sentence for ex-doctor who killed 4 people in Nebraska Posted: 14 Sep 2018 05:59 PM PDT |
These Photos Show The Devastation Caused By Hurricane Florence Posted: 15 Sep 2018 05:20 AM PDT |
Shark kills man boogie boarding off Cape Cod beach as sightings increase Posted: 15 Sep 2018 03:05 PM PDT A body surfer has died after being bitten by a shark in the waters off Cape Cod in the first fatal attack seen in the US state of Massachusetts for more than 80 years. Arthur Medici, a 26-year-old Brazilian who was studying in America, had been seen by beach-goers moments earlier performing tricks 25 metres out in the waves at Newcomb Hollow Beach in the town of Wellfleet. Mr Medici 's girlfriend's brother desperately dragged him to shore where off-duty lifeguards performed CPR and made tourniquets to try and stem the bleeding. He was pronounced dead later in hospital having suffered multiple bite wounds to the legs. Joe Booth, a local fisherman who witnessed the incident, told the Cape Cod Times that he first spotted a giant eruption of water, fifteen feet wide. "I saw a tail and a lot of thrashing. You could tell by the body language of the guys in the water something wasn't right," he added. A dead great white shark on the Truro shoreline in Massachusetts, where researchers believe smaller, younger specimens are swimming closer to land increasing the risk of human encounters Credit: Ken Johnson /Atlantic White Shark Conservancy via AP "I was that guy on the beach screaming, 'Shark, shark!' It was like right out of that movie Jaws. This has turned into Amity Island real quick out here." On Sunday, the beach remained closed as experts speculated on the type of shark responsible. About | Shark attacks "Based on the information I know, the highest probability is that it was a (great) white shark. I can't think of any other species that would do this," said Gregory Skomal, state Division of Marine Fisheries shark researcher. "Unfortunately he was in an area where the shark was hunting. When they strike with a ferocity of this nature, they believe what they are eating is an aggressive seal that can fight back. " William Lytton suffered puncture wounds to his leg and torso when he was attacked by a shark in August while swimming off a beach in Truro Credit: Steven Senne/AP The last fatal shark attack in Massachusetts was in 1936 when a 16-year-old boy was killed. But this summer there have been multiple reported sightings of Great Whites along the picturesque coastline, famous for its lighthouses and windswept beaches. William Lytton, a 61-year-old neurologist, was bitten on the leg in August and is still recovering. In an interview just last week with the Boston Globe he said he may be a little hesitant to go back in the water. "But you know, you fall off the horse, you got to get back on," he added. |
Manafort’s capitulation leaves a wide-open field for Mueller’s team Posted: 15 Sep 2018 09:06 AM PDT |
Bird's-eye abstraction: Iceland viewed from above Posted: 16 Sep 2018 06:14 AM PDT |
American professor detained by Israel in West Bank scuffle Posted: 15 Sep 2018 08:47 AM PDT |
Cardinal says women should train priests to fight abuse 'crisis' Posted: 15 Sep 2018 10:08 PM PDT |
Humpback Whales Stun Onlookers With Incredible Triple Breach Posted: 15 Sep 2018 07:22 PM PDT |
Hundreds of firefighters to head to Utah to fight wildfire Posted: 14 Sep 2018 06:25 PM PDT |
Five deaths in mariachi plaza shootout pose test for Mexico's new government Posted: 15 Sep 2018 05:29 PM PDT At Plaza Garibaldi in the capital's historic downtown on Friday night, gunmen said by witnesses to be dressed as mariachi musicians opened fire with pistols and rifles, injuring eight and sending onlookers running and screaming. Homicides have surged since 2014 in Mexico City, an arts, food and culture hotspot for tourists from around the globe that has been spared much of the drug violence plaguing cartel strongholds, which has even hit resort towns Cancun, Los Cabos and Acapulco. The capital is on track to register a record number of homicides this year, and reversing that trend is part of incoming President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador's enormous challenge to stem crime and violence nationwide. |
Florence death toll up at 11, including 3 killed by flooding Posted: 15 Sep 2018 02:48 PM PDT |
GOP Donor Les Wexner Announces Departure From Republican Party After Obama Visit Posted: 15 Sep 2018 12:13 PM PDT |
Ken Starr Says If President Trump Fires Robert Mueller 'There Would Be Hell To Pay' Posted: 15 Sep 2018 09:19 AM PDT |
The BMW Vision iNext Is Autonomous and Frighteningly Intelligent Posted: 15 Sep 2018 03:00 PM PDT |
Sex abuse claims rock Dutch Catholic Church Posted: 15 Sep 2018 12:33 PM PDT More than half of the Netherlands' senior clerics were involved in covering up sexual assault of children between 1945 and 2010, a press report claimed Saturday, further engulfing the Catholic Church in a global abuse scandal. Over the course of 65 years, 20 of 39 Dutch cardinals, bishops and their auxiliaries "covered up sexual abuse, allowing the perpetrators to cause many more victims", the daily NRC reported. "Four abused children and 16 others allowed the transfer of paedophile priests who could have caused new victims in other parishes," the Dutch newspaper added. |
Hungary's Orban comes out fighting after EU setback Posted: 14 Sep 2018 07:47 PM PDT The European Parliament's threat to unleash sanctions against Hungary over democracy concerns was a stunning political blow against Prime Minister Viktor Orban, but his dominance at home means defeat can still be spun as a win. A resolution passed in Strasbourg Wednesday ruled that the Hungarian government posed a "systemic threat" to the EU's founding values of democracy and the rule of law. The vote, backed by Manuel Weber, the head of the European People's Party -- the grouping Orban's Fidesz party also belongs to -- could in theory lead to Budapest being stripped of its EU voting rights. |
Before and after a storm, the supply stores are critical Posted: 15 Sep 2018 10:30 PM PDT |
Photos and videos show the destruction and power of Florence Posted: 15 Sep 2018 11:07 AM PDT While Florence is, as of 12:00 p.m. ET on Saturday, now "just" a tropical storm, it has still ripped the Carolina coast with heavy winds and record-breaking rainfall, causing widespread damage for humans and wildlife alike. Photos and videos from around the region, and particularly North Carolina, showed the power that Florence contained as it came ashore, leading to rescues across the area. Residents of New Bern, NC and their dog are rescued from rising floodwaters caused by Hurricane Florence.Image: Getty Images Rescues were underway even as Florence's heavy rains and winds continued to batter the region.Image: Getty Images RIGHT NOW: New York City's Urban Search and Rescue team is in River Bend, North Carolina helping the Rhems Volunteer Fire Department evacuate and rescue people during Hurricane Florence. pic.twitter.com/dMPq8l52oA — NYC Mayor's Office (@NYCMayorsOffice) September 14, 2018 Wildlife also found itself directly affected by Florence's floodwaters, including these deer seen swimming through neck-deep water. And dolphins were spotted closer than usual to shore near in Wilmington, North Carolina. Nearly three feet of rain has fallen on portions of North Carolina, a reported record for the state for rainfall from a single storm. Heavy rains and storm surge created destructive flooding of several feet throughout the Carolina coast.Image: Getty Images Boats are stacked up on each other in a marina as a result from Florence in New Bern, North Carolina.Image: Steve Helber/AP/REX/Shutterstock A statue reaches above Florence's floodwaters in North Carolina.Image: Getty Images Sam Parks walks through flooded Water Street as Hurricane Florence comes ashore in Wilmington, North CarolinaImage: JIM LO SCALZO/EPA-EFE/REX/Shutterstock Florence's flooding claims a couple of cars and the first story of a house in New Bern, NC.Image: Getty Images Kim Adams wades through waist-deep floodwaters at her home in Southport, North Carolina.Image: Getty ImagesMeanwhile, in South Carolina, at least one gator seemed to be cool with the outer bands of wind and rain that whipped the Myrtle Beach area. The effects of Florence won't be fading anytime soon, either, as current forecasts have upwards of 15-to-20 additional inches of rain possible for areas of North and South Carolina will Florence's remnants will linger for the next 48 to 72 hours. WATCH: View of Hurricane Florence from space |
Everyone wants answers: State, feds hunt for gas blast cause Posted: 14 Sep 2018 06:56 PM PDT |
Posted: 16 Sep 2018 08:15 AM PDT |
Vice-Chancellors told to 'prioritise' mental health of students Posted: 15 Sep 2018 04:01 PM PDT Vice-Chancellors have been told they must "prioritise" the mental health and well-being of new students, as the universities minister says that this requires "leadership from the top". In a letter sent to all vice-Chancellors in the country ahead of students' return to university this week for the start of a new term, Sam Gyimah warned that there is "no negotiation" when it comes to mental health. "With the new academic year upon us, I'm sure you would agree that good mental health and wellbeing underpins successful participation and attainment," he said. "Collectively, we must prioritise the wellbeing and mental health of our students – there is no negotiation on this. To make this happen, leadership from the top is essential." Mr Gyimah has previously called for a greater focus on mental health issues, saying that universities' main purpose is no longer learning. Last year, a vice-Chancellor warned that universities are turning a blind eye to freshers' week "excesses" He has said that only "traditional" vice-Chancellors see "the prime purpose of their university as training of the mind", adding that: "This is no longer the case." This week, universities will begin their Freshers' Week itineraries, with around 400,000 students due to start university as first years. Last year, a vice-Chancellor warned that universities are turning a blind eye to freshers' week "excesses", and urged institutions to end their "permissive" culture. Sir Anthony Seldon, vice-Chancellor of Buckingham University, said that first-year students should be offered alternative activities to parties and social events where heavy drinking and drug-taking are prevalent. "The norm for many fresher students involves heavy drinking sessions in bars, which is inappropriate for many students," Sir Anthony said in a new report. "Many universities turn a blind eye to excessive drinking, believing that what students choose to do with alcohol, and indeed drugs, is none of their business." Sir Anthony's report, published by the Higher Education Policy Institute (Hepi), outlines how to create "positive universities" also suggests first-year students take psychology courses that teach them about the importance of wellbeing and good mental health. |
Archbishop of Washington prostrates himself at mass for abuse victims Posted: 14 Sep 2018 09:15 PM PDT Cardinal Donald Wuerl, the archbishop of Washington who was blamed for not doing enough to deal with pedophile priests in Pennsylvania, prostrated himself Friday in a sign of repentance at a mass dedicated to victims of abuse. "Our prayers are for those who were assaulted by serious abuse of the clergy and the further indignity of an inadequate response," said Wuerl, who has said he plans to travel to Rome in the near future to meet with Pope Francis to discuss his resignation. This action on my part is an essential aspect of the healing so that this archdiocesan Church we all love can move forward," he wrote in a letter to the priests of Washington. |
Polls open in Syrian local elections: state media Posted: 15 Sep 2018 11:20 PM PDT Voting began across government-controlled parts of Syria on Sunday for the war-ravaged country's first local elections since 2011, state news agency SANA said. "Voting centres opened for citizens to cast their ballots to elect their representatives in the local administrative councils," SANA reported. Syrian state television broadcast footage of voters around Damascus and in the coastal government bastions of Tartus and Latakia dropping their ballots into plastic boxes as election officials looked on. |
Syria: Israel launched missile attack on Damascus airport Posted: 15 Sep 2018 02:31 PM PDT |
London mayor calls for second referendum on Brexit: Observer Posted: 15 Sep 2018 01:51 PM PDT London mayor Sadiq Khan has called for another referendum on Britain's European Union membership, adding his backing to an idea known as a "People's Vote". Britain is due to leave the European Union on March 29. The intervention in favor of a second referendum from Khan, a senior member of Britain's opposition Labour Party, will put more pressure on Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn to also support the second referendum idea. |
Florence Flooding Breaches Makeshift Levee Reinforcement In North Carolina Posted: 16 Sep 2018 02:25 PM PDT |
Dallas police face ire over portrayal of man shot by officer Posted: 14 Sep 2018 05:54 PM PDT |
Tropical Storm Florence continues to flood roads and neighborhoods Posted: 15 Sep 2018 02:46 PM PDT |
87 Incredibly Easy Skillet Chicken Dinners Posted: 16 Sep 2018 03:09 PM PDT |
Trump Says Democrats Are Playing GOP 'Like A Fiddle' On Border Wall Posted: 15 Sep 2018 08:08 PM PDT |
The new vinegars: too good to splash on fish and chips Posted: 15 Sep 2018 10:00 PM PDT Pucker up, food lovers: we're rediscovering our taste for tart. Since fermented foods are now recognised as being not only delicious but also good for the gut, vinegar has enjoyed a resurgence, emerging more flavourful and versatile than ever. Long relegated in Britain to being doused on fish and chips (dear old malt) or splashed in salad dressing (red or white wine, or balsamic), the condiment is now a feature ingredient in its own right. Chefs are making vinegars from scratch, infused with fruit, flowers and herbs, or, more bizarrely, wood ant and burnt toast. And for home cooks, supermarkets and specialist food shops now stock vinegars made from vintage grapes or perfumed with petals, and craft versions matured in oak barrels. Online food retailer Sous Chef reports a 23 per cent increase in sales of speciality vinegars in the past year, with balsamic growing by a whopping 75 per cent. Waitrose stocks 38 different varieties of the sharp stuff. The word "vinegar" comes from the Latin for "sour wine"; Roman legions valued its sharpness as a thirst quencher and drank it with water. Vinegar is sour because it is diluted acetic acid, created by the natural fermentation of wine or other forms of alcohol. This makes it a good preservative; the microorganisms that destroy food cannot survive in such an acidic environment. So, if you embalm ripe fruit, vegetables or herbs in vinegar, you freeze-frame the produce at its peak and imbue the vinegar with its flavour. Pasteurised or distilled vinegar has been heated to kill all the bacteria, but "live" varieties contain "the mother" – the cloud of live organisms that are good for gut health. Jars of different vinegars at Scully restaurant in east London For centuries, British cooks made good use of vinegar (think mushroom ketchup and piccalilli), according to food historian Angela Clutton, author of the forthcoming book The Vinegar Cupboard (Absolute Press, Feb 2019). So why did it fall out of favour? "Because it wasn't very good," Clutton admits. "We lost our craftsmen vinegar producers. Machine-made took over for speed and cost, so most of what was available was just not that great." In the basement kitchen of Scully restaurant in London, chef-proprietor Ramael Scully has buckets of vinegars burbling away. In the restaurant, gleaming jars fill the shelves, made with tayberries, kumquats, blackberry leaves, gooseberries and more. There's burnt toast vinegar on the go, made from charred sourdough and cider vinegar. What will he use this for? "I've no idea! That's the exciting thing," he says. But it will eventually add sparkle to one of his dishes. "I believe anything rich needs a bit of acidity," Scully says. "Vinegar brings balance." At Carters of Moseley in Birmingham, Brad Carter's cooking is firmly anchored in British-grown ingredients, so lemons are out and vinegar is vital to brighten and add flavour. He anoints fresh rhubarb with rhubarb vinegar, the sour notes teasing out hidden sweetness, and brushes roasted meat with a vinegar paste to snip through the richness. "Every dish should have an element of acidity – that's what elevates it," Carter says. Great vinegars Vinegar features on the best drinks menus, too. Kate Hawkings, author of Aperitif (Quadrille, £16.99), says shrubs are the perfect antidote to sweet cocktails. "The sourness makes them more appetising, more grown up," she says. Hawkings runs Bellita bar and restaurant in Bristol, where she serves shrubs – strawberry and black pepper, say, or pineapple and kaffir lime leaf – with a splash of soda, or spirits. "They cut the alcohol nicely," she says. Thom Eagle, head chef and fermenter at The Picklery in east London, thinks the popularity of vinegar is a sign that British palates are finally learning to appreciate a sour element in food. "Mediterranean chefs add a squeeze of fresh lemon, and in far-eastern cooking there's a tradition of balancing sweet and sour," he says. "Here, people are only just realising that adding a dash of vinegar at the end of cooking is a way to round out the seasoning." He suggests adding a splash of good vinegar at the start of cooking and finishing with a dash of a more complex vinegar, such as a sherry or red wine version. "It allows different aspects of the flavour to come through," Eagle says. So next time your dinner tastes like it's missing something, reach for the vinegar, not the salt: a dash of sour might be just what it needs. Ramael Scully's crispy salt and vinegar potatoes with lime and cardamom yogurt SERVES Four INGREDIENTS 500g Maris Pipers, lightly scrubbed with skin left on 100ml white wine vinegar, plus 1 tbsp 200g Greek yogurt 1 tbsp olive oil Zest of 1 lime and juice of ½ 2 tsp ground cardamom 300g masa harina, plus a little extra for dusting 100g cornflour 700-800ml soda water 1 litre vegetable oil, for frying Grated lime zest, to serve METHOD Slice the potatoes into 1cm-thick medallions. Add to a medium-sized saucepan and cover with water. Add 100ml vinegar and a teaspoon of salt. Bring to boil, turn heat down and simmer for 10- 25 minutes, until al dente. Mix together the yogurt, olive oil, lime zest and juice, cardamom and some salt and pepper to create a thick paste. Leave paste in the fridge until needed. To make the batter, mix together the masa harina, cornflour and a teaspoon of salt. Make a well in the middle and add the soda water and tablespoon of vinegar. Mix to a very thick batter. Place in the fridge. Drain the potatoes gently and spread on a baking tray lined with a dry J-cloth. Preheat the vegetable oil to 180C in a large saucepan or frying pan. Cook the potatoes in batches, coating them first in a layer of masa harina, then dip into the batter, then submerge in the oil. Fry to golden brown (any longer and the batter will turn bitter). Remove with a slotted spoon, dry on kitchen paper and serve sprinkled with salt and lime zest, to dip in the yogurt. |
Posted: 15 Sep 2018 11:07 AM PDT |
Seven hurt, one critically, in brawl in southeast English town Posted: 16 Sep 2018 02:11 PM PDT Seven people were being treated in hospital, one of them in a critical condition, after they were involved in a fight in a residential street in the southeastern English town of Luton on Sunday, police said. Police said on Twitter that they attended the scene after receiving reports of a large number of individuals fighting. |
Hundreds rescued from flooding in historic NC city Posted: 14 Sep 2018 06:12 PM PDT |
Deluged by Hurricane Matthew, rural town waits for Florence Posted: 15 Sep 2018 08:44 AM PDT |
Turkey-Russia discord over Idlib defers regime offensive, for now Posted: 14 Sep 2018 06:23 PM PDT Disagreement between Turkey and Russia over how to tackle the Syrian rebel stronghold of Idlib seems to have deferred a looming regime offensive on the province, analysts say. Russia and Turkey are on opposite sides of the conflict, but key global allies. Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan met Russian and Iranian leaders Vladimir Putin and Hassan Rouhani in Tehran on September 7 to discuss Syria, just as a major assault by Russia-backed regime forces on Idlib appeared imminent. |
Man charged with killing 2 Arizona girls who went missing Posted: 16 Sep 2018 01:15 AM PDT |
Michael Moore Thinks Donald Trump Or 'One Of His Minions' Wrote Anonymous NYT Op-Ed Posted: 16 Sep 2018 01:56 PM PDT |
How to Wash a Pillow to Keep It Smelling Fresh Posted: 16 Sep 2018 03:03 AM PDT |
Typhoon Mangkhut closes in on Hong Kong Posted: 16 Sep 2018 01:04 AM PDT |
Posted: 15 Sep 2018 09:00 AM PDT |
Germany's Seehofer still optimistic about migrant deal with Italy Posted: 15 Sep 2018 04:38 AM PDT German Interior Minister Horst Seehofer on Saturday said he remained optimistic about completing a deal on migrants with Italy despite pushback from Italian Deputy Prime Minister Matteo Salvini. Salvini on Friday denied having reached a deal to take back migrants who had already applied for asylum in Italy, saying he wanted more concessions from Berlin. Seehofer had announced on Thursday that he had secured an accord with Italy over the issue in line with similar deals negotiated with Greece and Spain. |
NASA counts down to launch of laser study of ice sheets Posted: 14 Sep 2018 10:27 PM PDT NASA counted down Saturday to the launch of its $1 billion ICESat-2 mission, using advanced lasers to uncover the true depth of the melting of Earth's ice sheets. The mission will inform sea level rise forecasts and is "exceptionally important for science," according to Richard Slonaker, ICESat-2 program executive at NASA. The half-ton satellite should reveal unprecedented detail about the current thickness of ice at the vulnerable polar regions as the climate warms. |
Rains from Florence cause collapse at NC coal ash landfill Posted: 16 Sep 2018 02:48 PM PDT |
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