Yahoo! News: India Top Stories - Reuters
Yahoo! News: India Top Stories - Reuters |
- W.Va. Sen. Capito’s difficult journey to ‘no’
- Does Trump Scare GOP Senators?
- California sheriff deputy mending from gunshot wound to face
- Congressman: Healthcare Might Not Be in Trump's 'wheelhouse'
- Prosecutor, governor spar over death penalty in Florida's top court
- Home Invader Crawls Into Woman's Bed to Ask If He Can Stay the Night: Cops
- NASA finds signs of ancient 'Niagara Falls' of lava on Mars
- 2017 Ford Mustang
- Syria's chemical weapons programme goes 'far beyond one airfield', warns US Defence Secretary James Mattis
- British police officer tells how he took on London Bridge attackers
- Sharks Caught On Video Swimming Up To Florida Tourists
- Girl, 4, Fatally Struck by Houseboat, Father's Legs Severed as He Tried to Save Her: Cops
- US Republicans, facing health care revolt, delay Senate vote
- Wildfires in Arizona, California, Utah force hundreds from their homes
- An ancient 'skull cult' might've carved up bones to shame their enemies
- French air force commander under investigation for allegedly using fighter jet to fly to Provence home
- Yes he can: Obama returns to Indonesia for family vacation
- Parents Of Teen Whose Murderer Took A ‘Selfie’ With Victim Break Silence
- Hong Kong activist Joshua Wong detained by police
- 2020 deadline to avert climate catastrophe: experts
- Internet tax is real and I have been paying it for years, by Jeff Bezos
- Through darkness to light: Photographs along the Underground Railroad
- China launches new class of naval destroyer
- Appeals court ruling opens door to Ohio resuming executions
- North Korea Threatens To Execute South Korea's Former President
- Starbucks Worker Mysteriously Vanishes While Taking a Break
- Israel forces hit Syria army after new stray fire
- NASA created glowing, artificial auroras that looked a whole lot like UFOs
- Taking Too Much of This Vitamin Can Cause Serious Health Issues
- Indian IT firm Wipro touts U.S. jobs amid visa uncertainty
- Chevrolet Camaro ZL1 1LE: First Drive
- Mississippi man takes Confederate flag fight to high court
- Man Catches Shark With Bare Hands
- 'Good Samaritan' Trying to Help Lost Toddler Attacked by Child's Father: Cops
- Tiny Bhutan protests to China over border road
- Iraqi leader declares end to IS caliphate but fight goes on
- Germany's Gabriel urges lasting ceasefire in eastern Ukraine
- 2019 Ram 1500: More Mega Cab?
- The iPhone is no longer the fastest phone in the world
- Trump Attacks MSNBC Host Mika Brzezinski On Twitter
W.Va. Sen. Capito’s difficult journey to ‘no’ Posted: 28 Jun 2017 12:25 PM PDT Sen. Shelley Moore Capito, R-W.Va., announced Tuesday she was against the current version of the Senate GOP health care bill. In an exchange that was filmed by someone else in the room and later posted on Facebook , where it has been viewed more than 5 million times, Hill showed the senator photos of Amy before and after her diagnoses, when she was in the hospital undergoing treatment. |
Does Trump Scare GOP Senators? Posted: 28 Jun 2017 12:30 PM PDT |
California sheriff deputy mending from gunshot wound to face Posted: 28 Jun 2017 07:00 PM PDT |
Congressman: Healthcare Might Not Be in Trump's 'wheelhouse' Posted: 28 Jun 2017 02:38 AM PDT |
Prosecutor, governor spar over death penalty in Florida's top court Posted: 28 Jun 2017 11:14 AM PDT |
Home Invader Crawls Into Woman's Bed to Ask If He Can Stay the Night: Cops Posted: 29 Jun 2017 10:00 AM PDT |
NASA finds signs of ancient 'Niagara Falls' of lava on Mars Posted: 28 Jun 2017 03:52 PM PDT Sure, NASA has found signs of ancient water on Mars multiple times over the years, but now it's time to talk about something that's significantly more badass: molten Martian lava. NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter (MRO) has taken photos of a part of the red planet that once played host to huge multi-tiered falls of lava that cascaded into a crater. SEE ALSO: NASA's Curiosity rover has a pet rock on Mars The images even show off the (now dried) circular flow of lava at the base of the falls, where the molten rock fanned outward on the crater's floor, NASA said. "The lava flows and falls are distinct as they are rougher than the original features that are smooth and knobby," NASA said in a statement, referring to the features as the "Niagara Falls of Mars." A 3D view of the lava flow.Image: NASA/JPL-Caltech/Univ. of Arizona"In a close-up image the rough-textured lava flow to the north has breached the crater wall at a narrow point, where it then cascades downwards, fanning out and draping the steeper slopes of the wall in the process." This isn't the first evidence of lava on Mars. Researchers have also theorized that there were once channels of lava on Mars, and even lava tubes on the red planet, shaping its geology. The MRO has taken thousands of pictures of Mars over the years, revealing features on the surface of the red planet as never before. The orbiter even caught sight of other robots exploring the world below. Image: NASA/JPL-Caltech/Univ. of ArizonaNASA and other space agencies are particularly interested in studying Mars because it might hold their best chance of finding signs of past life in our solar system outside of Earth. By studying Mars' past, we may be able to learn a little bit more about our own place in the cosmic neighborhood. WATCH: What it was like to pretend to live on Mars inside a dome for a year |
Posted: 28 Jun 2017 12:00 PM PDT |
Posted: 28 Jun 2017 05:56 AM PDT US Defence Secretary James Mattis has said that Syria's chemical weapons programme goes "far beyond one airfield". The comment appears to be a reference to the Syrian airfield which the United States struck in April, alleging the President Bashar al-Assad had used it to launch a chemical weapons attack on his own people. Mr Mattis said he believes the Syrian regime has now stockpiled chemical weapons in other parts of the country, in violation of international agreements. |
British police officer tells how he took on London Bridge attackers Posted: 28 Jun 2017 11:22 AM PDT A police officer who tried to stop three militants as they attacked people on London Bridge earlier this month described on Wednesday how he took on the men armed with just his baton despite being repeatedly stabbed and temporarily blinded. The three attackers rammed a hired van into pedestrians on the bridge late on June 3 before going on the rampage through the bustling Borough Market area, where they slit throats and stabbed people, killing eight. Police Constable Wayne Marques said he had heard screams coming from London Bridge and when he went to investigate saw people being attacked. |
Sharks Caught On Video Swimming Up To Florida Tourists Posted: 28 Jun 2017 01:41 PM PDT |
Girl, 4, Fatally Struck by Houseboat, Father's Legs Severed as He Tried to Save Her: Cops Posted: 29 Jun 2017 09:10 AM PDT |
US Republicans, facing health care revolt, delay Senate vote Posted: 27 Jun 2017 06:58 PM PDT A Republican rebellion forced the delay Tuesday of a Senate vote on the party's health care overhaul, an embarrassing setback for US President Donald Trump who was left scrambling to salvage the controversial plan. With the Senate bill delayed until after the July 4 congressional recess, the timeline of the effort -- and the overall viability of a years-long bid to dismantle Barack Obama's Affordable Care Act (ACA) in favor of a Republican replacement -- was thrown into question. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell acknowledged he did not have the votes, after a non-partisan forecast projected the bill would swell the ranks of the uninsured by 22 million by 2026 as compared to current law. |
Wildfires in Arizona, California, Utah force hundreds from their homes Posted: 28 Jun 2017 09:46 AM PDT |
An ancient 'skull cult' might've carved up bones to shame their enemies Posted: 28 Jun 2017 12:03 PM PDT An ancient "skull cult" might've existed thousands of years ago in present-day Turkey. Three deeply carved skulls found at the Göbekli Tepe archaeological site suggest that humans disfigured the bones as part of a ritual, perhaps to venerate the dead or absorb the powers of fallen enemies, a team of German anthropologists reported this week in a new study. SEE ALSO: Cats have been getting humans to do their bidding for 9,000 years Skull cults were common during the Neolithic period, which began around 10,000 B.C. Other digs worldwide have uncovered skulls covered in paint or plaster, or bearing intricate designs. In some modern Pacific Island cultures, skulls still represent a link between the living and the dead. Details of artificial skull modifications. A, C, D: carvings, B: drilled perforation.Image: Julia Gresky, DAIHowever, the ancient bones from Turkey are unique among the Neolithic skull cults. These are the first from their era to display a crude, practical-looking marking, according to the study published Wednesday in the journal Science Advances. The three skulls had multiple deep incisions along their midlines that were likely carved with a flint tool. Scientists ruled out natural causes for the markings, such as an animal gnawing at the bones, by using microscopic techniques. One skull also had a hole drilled into the left parietal bone, which forms the sides and roof of the cranium. Skull fragments with cut marks.Image: German Archaeological Institute Frontal bone fragment of skull 3 with carvings (1) and cut marks (2,3).Image: Julia Gresky, Juliane Haelm, DAI Unlike the more stylized or beautified skulls found at other sites, "Our skulls are not very nicely done. It doesn't look very decorative," Julia Gresky, the study's lead author and an anthropologist from the German Archaeological Institute (DAI), said by phone from Berlin. Excavations at Göbekli Tepe began in 1995. Gresky arrived at the dig site in 2009 after multiple human bone fragments were found. She found the last of three skulls in 2014 and began studying the markings closely with colleagues. Anthropomorphic depictions from Göbekli Tepe. (A) Intentionally decapitated human statue. (B) The gift bearer holds in his hands a human head. (C) Pillar 43 with low relief of an ithyphallic headless individual, one arm raised.Image: Dieter Johannes and Klaus Schmidt, Göbekli Tepe Archive, DAIWhile it's impossible to know what really happened at the Neolithic site, she said, the markings indicate the skulls were put on display. Perhaps the midline grooves or drilled hole helped stabilize the skulls. "The skull seems to have been very important for these [Neolithic] people," Gresky said. The lack of artistic flourish also suggests these scratchings were meant to stigmatize the person to whom the skull once belonged — making these trophies of enemies, not altars to ancestors. WATCH: Ancient Swedish herding call seems to put cows in a trance |
Posted: 28 Jun 2017 09:15 AM PDT |
Yes he can: Obama returns to Indonesia for family vacation Posted: 28 Jun 2017 10:46 AM PDT By Jessica Damiana JAKARTA (Reuters) - From white water rafting in Bali to visiting temples on Java, former U.S. President Barack Obama's private family holiday is being closely tracked in Indonesia where he spent four years as a child. Obama was six when he moved to Jakarta after his American mother, Ann Dunham, married an Indonesian man following the end of her marriage to Obama's Kenyan father. "I feel proud that my friend became a president," said Sonni Gondokusumo, 56, a former classmate of Obama at the Menteng 01 state elementary school in Jakarta. |
Parents Of Teen Whose Murderer Took A ‘Selfie’ With Victim Break Silence Posted: 28 Jun 2017 11:33 AM PDT |
Hong Kong activist Joshua Wong detained by police Posted: 28 Jun 2017 06:09 AM PDT Hong Kong student pro-democracy campaigner Joshua Wong was detained by police on Wednesday after an anti-China protest ahead of a visit by President Xi Jinping. Wong was among at least 20 protesters who had staged a three-hour sit-in at a harbourfront statue and were led away into police vans. Xi's visit this week marks 20 years since Hong Kong was handed back to China by Britain and comes at a time when fears are growing that Beijing is tightening its grip on the semi-autonomous city. |
2020 deadline to avert climate catastrophe: experts Posted: 28 Jun 2017 11:54 AM PDT Humanity must put carbon dioxide emissions on a downward slope by 2020 to have a realistic shot at capping global warming at well under two degrees Celsius, the bedrock goal of the Paris climate accord, experts said Wednesday. With 1.0 degree Celsius (1.8 degrees Fahrenheit) of warming so far, ice sheets that could lift oceans by a dozen metres are melting more quickly, coral reefs are dying from heat stress, and ever more damaging storm surges are hammering coastal communities. The transition to cleaner energy sources is well underway and is backed by broad consensus on the need to beat back the threat of climate change -- with the notable exception of the United States under President Donald Trump. |
Internet tax is real and I have been paying it for years, by Jeff Bezos Posted: 29 Jun 2017 09:16 AM PDT Hello, this is the CEO of Amazon/owner of The Washington Post Jeff Bezos. At around 9:00 a.m. on June 28, President Trump tweeted the following: The #AmazonWashingtonPost, sometimes referred to as the guardian of Amazon not paying internet taxes (which they should) is FAKE NEWS! — Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) June 28, 2017 Aside from the obvious inaccuracies in the president's tweet — Amazon doesn't own The Washington Post (I do), the Post isn't "the guardian of Amazon," and it isn't fake news — there's one massive, glaring issue that I take with the message. Contrary to what Mr. Trump says, I do pay internet tax, and I have done so for several years. SEE ALSO: I have drawn the Trump administration as Sonic the Hedgehog and I am ready to answer for it For as long as I can remember, I have been paying my annual internet tax in the form of a personal check written out to the IRS. Each calendar year, I pull out my checkbook, write out a check for however many millions of dollars in internet tax I owe, put "tax for internet" in the memo and ship it first class in an envelope that says "government" on the front. Read it and weep, idiot.Image: mashable composite; shutterstockThat's right, Mr. Trump. The joke is on you, because I have been sending internet tax to the federal government for YEARS. I do my part to help this country. Can you say the same? You may be thinking, "Jeff, what is internet tax and how do you calculate how much you owe?" A good question, with a simple answer. Internet tax is a tax for the internet — a contribution people make to continue using the world wide web. I learned about it on a weight lifting forum in 1999, back before anyone realized you could lie online. Internet tax is calculated pretty easily: each time you click the button on the mouse, you owe one dollar. Being a pretty prolific internet user, I pay an assistant $150,000 a year to live with me and count my clicks, and then I write out a check to the tax man. As you can see above, this year I clicked the mouse 28 million times. Yikes! Put it here like this so they'll see.Image: mashable composite; shutterstockMake no mistake: Internet tax is not the same thing as your internet bill. One is a bill, the other is a tax. They are different things. That being said, I would like to make it abundantly clear that if you have not been paying internet tax for as long as you have had the internet, you are breaking the law and will be arrested. Of course, if internet tax were as simple as I've made it out to be, we wouldn't all groan every time tax season rolls around, ha ha. Another more complicated part of the internet tax is that each year, about three weeks after sending the IRS your check, you will receive a call from the government informing you that they cannot accept your payment. They will tell you that you, "Do not owe this money," and there "Is not a tax on using the internet, it doesn't even make sense," and to "Please stop wasting government time by sending these enormous sums of money to our office." Whenever that happens, I simply continue sending checks to the IRS until they cash them. Merely another element in the cat and mouse game of internet tax. You know, sometimes, when I'm walking around in the big Amazon warehouse where I live with my whole extended family, I start to wonder if it's all worth it. Spending so much of my money, each and every year, on internet tax — is the internet worth the trouble? Then, I open my computer and log onto Twitter dot com, and see another insanely bad tweet from the 45th President of the United States. And I think to myself: yes. It's all worth it. Thanks for reading Mashable Humor: original comedy every day. Or most days. We're people, just like you, and we're trying our best. |
Through darkness to light: Photographs along the Underground Railroad Posted: 29 Jun 2017 11:08 AM PDT Through Darkness to Light: Photographs Along the Underground Railroad," a traveling exhibition by photographer Jeanine Michna-Bales presents a remarkable series of images taken in the dead of night that reveal historical sites, cities and places that freedom-seekers passed through, including homes of abolitionists who offered them sanctuary. |
China launches new class of naval destroyer Posted: 28 Jun 2017 05:38 AM PDT China's military on Wednesday launched a new type of domestically-built destroyer, state media said, the latest addition to the country's rapidly expanding navy. The 10,000-tonne warship was launched at the Jiangnan Shipyard in Shanghai, the official Xinhua news agency said, making it the first of the People's Liberation Army Navy's "new generation" destroyers. "It is equipped with new air defense, anti-missile, anti-ship and anti-submarine weapons," Xinhua said, without giving further details. |
Appeals court ruling opens door to Ohio resuming executions Posted: 28 Jun 2017 04:03 PM PDT |
North Korea Threatens To Execute South Korea's Former President Posted: 28 Jun 2017 02:48 PM PDT |
Starbucks Worker Mysteriously Vanishes While Taking a Break Posted: 28 Jun 2017 02:40 PM PDT |
Israel forces hit Syria army after new stray fire Posted: 28 Jun 2017 01:41 PM PDT Israel hit a Syrian regime position on Wednesday night after stray mortar fire from the war-torn country struck the occupied Golan Heights, in the third such exchange within a week. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu had been visiting the Israeli settlement of Katzrin, further south in the Golan, at the time of the exchange of fire. "During my speech, shells from the Syrian side landed in our territory and the Israel Defence Forces have already struck back," the Israeli premier said in an English-language statement. |
NASA created glowing, artificial auroras that looked a whole lot like UFOs Posted: 29 Jun 2017 08:16 AM PDT After many delays that disappointed space fans around the U.S., NASA finally managed to launch its mission early Thursday to, for the first time, create ephemeral, glowing clouds. In other words, NASA created human-caused auroras, of sorts. The suborbital sounding rocket took flight at 4:25 a.m. ET Thursday from NASA's Wallops Flight Facility in Virginia and released its payload — which consisted of 10 vapor-filled canisters — shortly afterwards. SEE ALSO: Here's why NASA keeps postponing its really cool mission to make glowing clouds Once at altitude, those canisters produced green-blue and red artificial clouds that should allow scientists to learn more about how particles move through space. The wait is over! The Terrier-Improved Malemute launched this morning, June 29, at 4:25 a.m. An early Independence Day fireworks display!! pic.twitter.com/Y5x6Oz2hu8 — NASA Wallops (@NASA_Wallops) June 29, 2017 The artificial auroras were seen by skywatchers up and down the East Coast of the United States. "Wallops received nearly 2,000 reports and photos of the cloud sightings from areas as far north as New York, south to North Carolina, and inland throughout Virginia, Maryland, Pennsylvania, and points in-between," NASA said in a statement. If you were out for an early morning stroll and happened to look up as the artificial clouds were created, you could probably be forgiven for thinking that you actually spotted a UFO. The bright clouds created by this mission look somewhat eerie in video footage. The blinking auroras started off as a bright blue-green color and then fade to a deeper hue of blue in the sky. It took NASA 11 launch attempts to get this mission off the ground, in part because of strict weather requirements. Mission controllers needed totally clear skies for this launch in order to be assured that they would see the colorful vapor when it was released from the canisters. And luckily, they got it on Thursday. Finally. WATCH: NASA just made a very important step toward getting humans to Mars |
Taking Too Much of This Vitamin Can Cause Serious Health Issues Posted: 28 Jun 2017 10:39 AM PDT Within the past two decades, there has been an increase in research pointing to the health benefits of vitamin D, and as a result more people than ever are taking supplements. However, a study published in the June 2017 issue of JAMA says that some people are taking way more than they need too. Researchers found that 18.2 percent of Americans ingest more than 1000 IU – which is 400 IU more than the recommended daily amount (RDA) for people ... |
Indian IT firm Wipro touts U.S. jobs amid visa uncertainty Posted: 28 Jun 2017 09:31 AM PDT Wipro Ltd , India's third-largest software services exporter, said on Wednesday that more than half its workforce in the United States consists of locals after it hired more than 1,600 people in the last six months. The statement comes as U.S. President Donald Trump has asked federal agencies to review a visa program that Indian IT firms such as Wipro use to fly engineers to the United States to service clients. Wipro rival Infosys Ltd last month said it planned to hire 10,000 U.S. workers in the next two years and open four technology centers in the United States. |
Chevrolet Camaro ZL1 1LE: First Drive Posted: 29 Jun 2017 07:44 AM PDT |
Mississippi man takes Confederate flag fight to high court Posted: 28 Jun 2017 12:03 PM PDT |
Man Catches Shark With Bare Hands Posted: 29 Jun 2017 09:35 AM PDT |
'Good Samaritan' Trying to Help Lost Toddler Attacked by Child's Father: Cops Posted: 27 Jun 2017 05:58 PM PDT |
Tiny Bhutan protests to China over border road Posted: 29 Jun 2017 03:17 AM PDT The tiny Himalayan kingdom of Bhutan has protested to its mighty neighbour China over road building in disputed territory that set off new frictions between Beijing and the Indian government on Thursday. China made a new demand on Thursday that Indian troops return to their side of the border between India's Sikkim state and Tibet on the Chinese side. Highlighting the widening tensions over the remote mountain zone, Bhutan's ambassador to New Delhi, Vetsop Namgyel, said his government had called on China's People's Liberation Army to stop building the road near where the Bhutan, Indian and Chinese borders meet. |
Iraqi leader declares end to IS caliphate but fight goes on Posted: 29 Jun 2017 03:11 PM PDT |
Germany's Gabriel urges lasting ceasefire in eastern Ukraine Posted: 28 Jun 2017 10:14 AM PDT German Foreign Minister Sigmar Gabriel on Wednesday called for Ukraine and Russian-backed separatists in eastern Ukraine to extend a harvest-related ceasefire, saying it could help pave the way for a political solution. Gabriel, speaking at a news conference with Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, called for a new effort to rein in arms spending worldwide and counteract a new arms race between Russia and the West. |
Posted: 29 Jun 2017 09:00 AM PDT |
The iPhone is no longer the fastest phone in the world Posted: 28 Jun 2017 06:43 AM PDT A new type of smartphone face-off has become increasingly popular over the past couple years. In an effort to measure real-world performance, YouTube vloggers have devised an unscientific test that compares the speeds of two phones. In a nutshell, they have a preset list of apps that they open in succession once to see how quickly a smartphone loads the apps. Then, they open all the apps again in the same order to see how quickly a smartphone can recall them from memory. Ever since this new breed of smartphone speed tests emerged, one line of devices has been unbeatable. Despite seemingly never quite measuring up on paper in terms of specs, Apple's iPhones continued to trounce any and all Android comers. But now, for the first time ever, an Android phone has finally topped Apple's latest iPhone to steal the crown and become the fastest phone in the world. We typically try not to spoil the ending when we post about these real-world speed tests, though in the past the ending has always been obvious. Regardless of which new Android flagship phone faces off with the iPhone, it always ends up getting embarrassed. In fact, we've even seen brand new Android powerhouses lose to previous-generation iPhone models in the past. On Tuesday evening, however, the unthinkable finally happened. Apple's latest iPhone model, the iPhone 7 Plus, was pitted against the just-released OnePlus 5 in one of these real world speed tests. The race was a close one. While the iPhone 7 Plus was able to win the first "lap," albeit narrowly, the OnePlus 5 and its whopping 8GB of RAM blew past Apple's iPhone while recalling apps from memory in the second lap. In the end, the OnePlus 5 took the crown. It might be considered a cruel twist of fate that the Android phone to finally supplant Apple's iPhone as the world's fastest phone is a handset that copied the iPhone 7 Plus so blatantly, both inside and out. We suppose that's just the way the cookie crumbles. The full speed test video is embedded below. |
Trump Attacks MSNBC Host Mika Brzezinski On Twitter Posted: 29 Jun 2017 09:34 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