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Yahoo! News: India Top Stories - Reuters |
- Venezuela Votes: Violence, Unrest Mark Day of Controversial Election
- How Kelly could really end White House chaos
- Australian Police Foil Plane Terror Plot
- Officials: Afghan children smuggled to Pakistan seminaries
- Van plows into diners on Los Angeles sidewalk
- How Different Is Obesity From Overweight
- White House communications director Scaramucci leaves in order to 'clean slate'
- Trump's Base Sticks With Him, Except in the South
- Martin Shkreli: jury to consider fate of 'most hated man in America'
- Kremlin says up to Washington to decide which embassy staff to cut
- China criticizes British freedom of navigation mission plans
- Transgender man gives birth to baby boy in Oregon
- Yemeni man executed for rape, murder of 3-year-old
- The truth about antibiotics: do you really need to take the full course?
- Islamic State claims responsibility for attack on Iraqi embassy in Kabul
- The meteoric rise and fall of Anthony Scaramucci
- Phone calls, dismissal threats: Venezuela pressures state workers to vote
- Woman Killed On Cruise Ship Mourned
- The Latest: US VP wants better relations with Russia
- Light up your life with this Amazon sale on solar powered landscape and walkway lights
- Anthony Scaramucci's wife files for divorce
- Mexican teenager dies after drinking liquid meth in front of smiling US border officers
- The 12 Most Beautiful Highways for Road Trips
- Kenyan voting official found dead as opposition cries foul ahead of general election
- Planet has just 5% chance of reaching Paris climate goal, study says
- No point in U.N. Security Council emergency session with no results: U.S Ambassador to U.N.
- Australia foils 'terror plot' to bring down airplane
- A Facebook AI Project Developed Its Own Language
- China must decide on further action against North Korea: U.S. ambassador to U.N.
- The Latest: Van strikes diners on LA sidewalk, 8 injured
- Everyone’s favorite AirPods rivals drop to all-time low of $24 on Amazon
- Donald Trump’s conflicts of interest are making the US government seem a ‘kleptocracy’, says former White House ethics chief
- A New Tesla Model 3 Will Launch After 'Production Hell' is Over
- Two dead, four wounded in M16 shooting at German nightclub
- AMD Radeon RX Vega 64 vs. GeForce GTX 1080
- Al-Shabab attack on African Union convoy kills 8 in Somalia
- Alabama police hunt for inmate after peanut butter jail break
- Rare sale slashes prices on the two best GoPro cameras
- 26 Ways To Reinvent Your Mashed Potatoes
- Duke and Duchess of Cambridge arrive in Belgium to commemorate 100 years since Passchendaele
- Ganyard on North Korea missile tests: 'We have to take this seriously'
- Archbishop of Canterbury declares Sudan new Anglican province
- Apple Taps LG For iPhones’ OLED Displays
Venezuela Votes: Violence, Unrest Mark Day of Controversial Election Posted: 30 Jul 2017 08:36 AM PDT |
How Kelly could really end White House chaos Posted: 31 Jul 2017 12:41 PM PDT |
Australian Police Foil Plane Terror Plot Posted: 30 Jul 2017 04:48 AM PDT |
Officials: Afghan children smuggled to Pakistan seminaries Posted: 30 Jul 2017 11:19 PM PDT |
Van plows into diners on Los Angeles sidewalk Posted: 31 Jul 2017 04:07 AM PDT The driver of a van that plowed into a group of people dining on a Los Angeles sidewalk, striking and injuring at least eight people, was arrested Sunday on suspicion of hit-and-run, authorities said. The vehicle knocked down a white picket fence that served as a barrier between diners and pedestrians on the sidewalk. "Everyone was eating, enjoying life and out of nowhere this van ran them over," Courtney Crump said. |
How Different Is Obesity From Overweight Posted: 30 Jul 2017 05:00 AM PDT |
White House communications director Scaramucci leaves in order to 'clean slate' Posted: 31 Jul 2017 01:39 PM PDT The White House said on Monday that Anthony Scaramucci, named by President Donald Trump as communications director only 10 days ago, was leaving the post. The change comes days after Scaramucci delivered a profanity-laced tirade against other top Trump aides - and hours after Trump swore in John Kelly, a new chief of staff, to bring discipline to his West Wing. "Mr. Scaramucci felt it was best to give Chief of Staff John Kelly a clean slate and the ability to build his own team," the White House said in a statement. |
Trump's Base Sticks With Him, Except in the South Posted: 29 Jul 2017 11:42 PM PDT |
Martin Shkreli: jury to consider fate of 'most hated man in America' Posted: 31 Jul 2017 02:00 AM PDT A jury will begin deliberations on Monday in the trial on securities fraud charges against the entrepreneur Martin Shkreli, who faces up to 20 years in prison. As arguments wrapped up in federal court in Brooklyn, New York, Shkreli, known to many as "the most hated man in America", was accused by government prosecutors of telling "lies upon lies" to investors and regarding himself as "above the law". In terminology reminiscent of one of his idols, Donald Trump, Shkreli used Facebook to tell his fans he was the victim of a witch-hunt. |
Kremlin says up to Washington to decide which embassy staff to cut Posted: 31 Jul 2017 09:11 AM PDT |
China criticizes British freedom of navigation mission plans Posted: 30 Jul 2017 10:43 PM PDT |
Transgender man gives birth to baby boy in Oregon Posted: 31 Jul 2017 02:31 AM PDT Trystan Reese, from Portland, Oregon, was born female but started taking hormones almost a decade ago. Mr Reese suffered a miscarriage the last time he got pregnant and believed he had missed his chance to have children of his own. Leo becomes the first biological child for Mr Reese and his husband, Biff Chaplow, who already have two adopted children. |
Yemeni man executed for rape, murder of 3-year-old Posted: 31 Jul 2017 04:22 AM PDT Thousands of people gathered in the rebel-held Yemeni capital Monday to witness the public execution of a man convicted of raping and murdering a three-year-old girl. Mohammed al-Moghrabi, 41, was sentenced to death for the June 25 rape and murder by a court run by the Shiite Huthi rebels who control Sanaa. Moghrabi was first given 100 lashes and then made to lie flat, his face on the ground, and killed by multiple gunshots by security forces to cheers from the crowd. |
The truth about antibiotics: do you really need to take the full course? Posted: 30 Jul 2017 11:00 PM PDT James Sutton battled doctors for six weeks to get a ten-day course of amoxicillin for his severe bronchitic chest infection. When he got the antibiotics, they didn't really work and, what's more, he had a major allergic reaction which caused a huge outbreak of hives all over his torso, adding to his misery. "No one seems to know any more what's the right thing to do," says Sutton, a 43-year-old fit and healthy publisher who cycles 18 miles to and from his office every day. "For the past 50 years or more, doctors have been giving us antibiotics and telling us we must make sure we complete the course, then they started rationing them because of antibiotic resistance in the bacteria. Now we're being told that doctors don't really know how to use them either because there hasn't been enough research, and that taking them for too long might be fuelling the rise of infection resistant superbugs." Ten senior scientists trawled medical literature and found that no studies have ever been done to support the 'complete the course' mantra He was referring to last week's report in the British Medical Journal declaring there is absolutely no evidence for the arbitrary lengths of time people are told to take antibiotics, which can range from two to ten days or even longer, and that it might be better for them to stop as soon as they feel better to reduce the global growth of antibiotic resistance in bacteria. The report has left many people baffled, and GPs have reported a stream of anxious inquiries from patients who are now unsure whose advice to believe. The report came from a group of 10 senior scientists led by Martin Llewelyn, professor of infectious diseases at Brighton and Sussex Medical School, who have trawled the literature and found no studies have ever been done to support the "complete the course" mantra, which his group says goes against all common sense to stop taking medicines when you're no longer ill, and probably assists the selective development of antibiotic resistant bugs by freeing up space in the body for them to colonise. A group of specialists has called for a change in guidance to prevent people taking pills needlessly Credit: Mike Harrington "There is evidence that in many situations stopping antibiotics sooner is a safe and effective way to reduce antibiotic overuse," the report said. "There are reasons to believe the public will accept that completing the course to prevent resistance is wrong, if the medical profession openly acknowledges that this is so." The BMJ paper repeats a similar publication by Professor Harold Lambert in The Lancet in 1999. "Antibiotic resistance is more likely to be encouraged by longer than by shorter courses," he wrote. It is not clear why the message has taken almost two decades to get through, but it could be that from being a relatively low-level concern, antibiotic resistance and our growing inability to overcome infection, has now become a source of major anxiety. Chief medical officer Dame Sally Davies has warned the golden age of effective antibiotics is over Sadly, Professsor Lambert an emeritus professor at St George's hospital medical school, did not live long enough to see his warnings taken seriously. He died in April this year. Only last week, however, a joint report from the European Medicines Agency, Food Safety Authority and Centre for Disease Prevention and Control, showed a worrying increase in resistant superbugs both in humans and in animals destined for meat consumption. Our own chief medical officer Dame Sally Davies has also warned the golden age of effective antibiotics is over. In a speech to the Institute of Actuaries earlier this Spring, she warned that 50,000 deaths a year are already being caused by superbugs in Europe and America. According to a government review published last year, at least 700,000 deaths globally are now caused by treatment-resistant infections, and that number is rising. So what should patients do? James Sutton was so ill he could hardly manage a flight of stairs and had been to the doctors twice before they agreed to give him antibiotics, and it was more than a week after he finished the course before he began to feel any better. In numbers | Antibiotic resistance "Now I'm left wondering if I would have got better on my own anyway, and taking this course of co-amoxiclav (amoxicillin) has just fuelled global antibiotic resistance and triggered an allergy, which means I might not be able to take antibiotics again," he said. While he and other patients may argue that maintaining the status quo without evidence does not make sense, the Royal College of General Practitioners (RCGP), which represents Britain's 51,000 family doctors, is sticking firmly to the line that practice should not change until there is evidence. "We cannot advocate widespread behaviour change on the results of just one study," said the RCGP chair Professore Helen Stokes-Lampard. "Recommended courses of antibiotics are not random. They are tailored to individual conditions. The mantra to always take the full course of antibiotics is well-known. Changing this will simply confuse people." Sir Alexander Fleming Credit: Getty She insisted, however, that long courses of antibiotics have been replaced anyway as knowledge has evolved: "Nowadays if a fit, well person comes in with a nasty urinary tract infection, they get a three-day course of antibiotics. That is the standard guidance. Guidance has changed, and it does change quite regularly." In the past few days, however, worried patients have begun queuing up at GP surgeries. "I was very surprised about this publication which goes against everything we have always been told," said Dr Martin Godfrey, a GP in south London. "It has indeed caused a lot of confusion, and we need more definitive guidance about what to say to people. "Lots of patients are now coming in and asking if they should stop taking the tablets because they think they're not doing anything. But the effects of antibiotics do sometimes take a while to kick in, and if people stop taking them too soon, there's a risk of the infection coming back with a vengeance." ABOUT | Antibiotics Dr Godfrey says there is indeed an increase in numbers of people claiming allergies to antibiotics in the same way more of us seem to be allergic to different elements of modern environment, but he warned against making a fuss about minor conditions such as hives. "If you have an antibiotic allergy recorded on your notes, you may not get them when you need them and in general it's worth putting up with something minor to get the benefit of antibiotics." Tim Peto, professor of infectious diseases at Oxford and one of the co-authors of the BMJ study, is also anxious to spell out the position. "We want people to do exactly what their GP tells them, but we want to encourage GPs to give people short courses of antibiotics if they think that's sensible. They might not have done this in the past because of a genuine fear of promoting antibiotic resistance by doing so, but they shouldn't feel pressurised to continue giving people longer courses. Our main message is that." Personalised medicine for everyone may be the answer. "At the moment, we are using antibiotics indiscriminately and hoping they might work," said Professor Colin Garner, a senior pharmacologist who is chief executive of the Antibiotic Research UK network of commercial and university scientists. "We can't even tell if someone has a bacterial infection or a viral one which antibiotics wont work on anyway," he said. "We need DNA fingerprinting so we can analyse infections in one or two hours in the same way we already analyse cancer tumours. That way, we can get the right antibiotic to the right person for the right bug, and do another test afterwards to check its been eliminated." Prof Garner says such technology is expected to become routinely available soon. Whether it can still tackle the new generation of superbugs, however, remains to be seen. |
Islamic State claims responsibility for attack on Iraqi embassy in Kabul Posted: 31 Jul 2017 07:31 AM PDT By Mirwais Harooni KABUL (Reuters) - Militant group Islamic State claimed responsibility for an attack on the Iraqi embassy in Kabul on Monday that began with a suicide bomber blowing himself up at the main gate, allowing gunmen to enter the building and battle security forces. Although there has been no confirmation of direct planning links with the main Islamic State movement in Iraq and Syria, the attack, just three weeks after the recapture of Mosul, underlines fears of a spillover into Afghanistan from fighting in Syria and Iraq. Afghan security forces confronted three gunmen for hours before the Interior Ministry announced in mid-afternoon that the attack, in a normally busy business district of the capital, had been suppressed. |
The meteoric rise and fall of Anthony Scaramucci Posted: 31 Jul 2017 01:33 PM PDT Anticipating a role in the incoming administration of then president-elect Donald Trump, Scaramucci moves to avoid any potential conflict of interest by selling his stake in his global investment firm, SkyBridge Capital. Scaramucci is blocked from a White House position, however, by Trump's chief of staff Reince Priebus and chief strategist Steve Bannon, both of whom were reportedly not overly fond of the brash Wall Street financier. |
Phone calls, dismissal threats: Venezuela pressures state workers to vote Posted: 30 Jul 2017 02:50 PM PDT By Alexandra Ulmer CARACAS (Reuters) - State workers in Venezuela are receiving frequent phone calls, pressure from bosses and threats of dismissal to ensure they vote in favor of President Nicolas Maduro's controversial new congress on Sunday. The unpopular leftist Maduro is pushing ahead with the election to create a powerful new legislature despite four months of deadly anti-government protests in the oil-rich South American nation, which is reeling from food shortages, runaway inflation and violent crime. Maduro says the 545-seat Constituent Assembly, which will have the power to dissolve all other state institutions, will overcome the "armed insurrection" to bring peace to Venezuela. |
Woman Killed On Cruise Ship Mourned Posted: 30 Jul 2017 10:53 PM PDT |
The Latest: US VP wants better relations with Russia Posted: 31 Jul 2017 04:53 AM PDT |
Light up your life with this Amazon sale on solar powered landscape and walkway lights Posted: 31 Jul 2017 05:57 AM PDT Going to your local home improvement or gardening store is a good option in a pinch, but everyone knows that you'll end up paying more there than you would if you ordered online. It's just the nature of the beast these days, and it definitely applies to home goods and gardening supplies. A perfect example is the Nekteck Solar Powered Garden Spotlight (2-Pack), which is currently on sale for limited time. Use the coupon code L9P29XIS and you'll only pay $19.99 for a 2-pack of these highly rated outdoor spotlights, which are solar powered and perfect for illuminating the facade of your house, your walkways, any landscaping features you might want to draw attention to at night, or even your garden. In a local home improvement store, you're lucky if you can find a decent outdoor spotlight even at twice the price. Here are some key details from the product page:
Nekteck Solar Powered Garden Spotlight (2-Pack): $19.99 with coupon code L9P29XIS (reg. $25.99) |
Anthony Scaramucci's wife files for divorce Posted: 31 Jul 2017 10:44 AM PDT |
Mexican teenager dies after drinking liquid meth in front of smiling US border officers Posted: 31 Jul 2017 01:12 AM PDT A 16-year-old died after he took several sips of liquid meth in front of smiling and laughing border patrol officers to prove it was "apple juice". Mexican high school student Cruz Velazquez was shown on CCTV footage taking the drink after he was stopped from entering the US at a border crossing. The footage, obtained three years later, showed the jovial behaviour of the officers and the context of the teenager's death for the first time. |
The 12 Most Beautiful Highways for Road Trips Posted: 31 Jul 2017 07:52 AM PDT |
Kenyan voting official found dead as opposition cries foul ahead of general election Posted: 31 Jul 2017 10:16 AM PDT Kenya's opposition said it had abandoned all hope of a free and fair general election next week after a key official responsible for protecting the vote from electronic manipulation was found dead. The apparent murder of Chris Msando, the electoral commission's acting technology director, raised fears that an already acrimonious poll could be marred by the type of violence that killed 1,300 people in Kenya ten years ago. Two days after Mr Msando's disappearance, colleagues at the commission said they had formally identified his battered body after finding it at a mortuary in the capital Nairobi. Wafula Chebukati, the commission's chairman, said it was clear that Mr Msando "had been tortured" before his death. There were injuries to the dead man's head, back and belly, deep cuts on both hands and one arm appeared to be broken, according to witnesses who saw the corpse. Unidentified relatives of Chris Musando, cry after seeing his body at the city mortuary, in Nairobi With tension already mounting ahead of next Tuesday's election, Mr Msando's death could undermine the credibility of the result even though there is as yet no proof to link the killing to the vote. Raila Odinga, the opposition leader, has already repeatedly accused Uhuru Kenyatta, the president, of trying to rig the vote in order to secure a second five-year term. Salim Lone, Mr Odinga's spokesman, said that the killing had removed the "one last hope" of an honest election. "It is unbelievable," he said. "It shows that those who want to subvert this election will stop at nothing to achieve their goal and they do not care if Kenyans know what they are doing." Mr Msando held the encryption codes that ensured the integrity of results transmitted from polling stations to the electoral commission's central headquarters. Were the codes to be compromised, the results could potentially be tampered with — although observers also said that any such fraud would be quickly identified. Campaign posters of candidates for the role of local representative are seen on a water tank in the Barut ward, Nakuru Credit: REUTERS Mr Msando had only recently been appointed to the post after the suspension of his predecessor, James Muhati, who was accused by auditors of impeding them from assessing electronic systems. In a country deeply divided by tribal animosities, suspicions have been further fuelled by the ethnicity of the two men. Mr Muhati is a Kikuyu, like the president, while Mr Msando is a Luhya, an ethnic federation that mostly supports the opposition. The death is the latest in a series of mysterious killings blamed — not always credibly, critics say — by the opposition on the government. Mr Kenyatta, who holds a narrow advantage in opinion polls, has accused his rival of making unsubstantiated claims and has persistently denied any plan to rig the election. Nonetheless Kenya has a history of questionable elections. The most dubious was in 2007 which led to widespread ethnic violence after a badly flawed poll saw Mr Odinga beaten into second place. Amid fears of a repeat, some people — particularly Mr Msando's fellow Luhyas — have begun fleeing slums in Nairobi for the countryside. |
Planet has just 5% chance of reaching Paris climate goal, study says Posted: 31 Jul 2017 08:00 AM PDT Environmental activists protest Donald Trump's decision to exit the Paris climate accords, which set a goal of avoiding warming beyond 2C. There is only a 5% chance that the Earth will avoid warming by at least 2C come the end of the century, according to new research that paints a sobering picture of the international effort to stem dangerous climate change. Global trends in the economy, emissions and population growth make it extremely unlikely that the planet will remain below the 2C threshold set out in the Paris climate agreement in 2015, the study states. |
No point in U.N. Security Council emergency session with no results: U.S Ambassador to U.N. Posted: 30 Jul 2017 01:27 PM PDT There is no point in having an emergency session of the United Nations Security Council if it produces nothing of consequence, U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Nikki Haley said in a statement on Sunday. "An additional Security Council resolution that does not significantly increase the international pressure on North Korea is of no value. In fact, it is worse than nothing, because it sends the message to the North Korean dictator that the international community is unwilling to seriously challenge him. |
Australia foils 'terror plot' to bring down airplane Posted: 30 Jul 2017 06:45 AM PDT Australia has foiled an Islamist-inspired terrorist plot to bring down an aircraft with an improvised explosive device, authorities said Sunday, after four people were arrested in raids across Sydney. Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull said the plot appeared to be "elaborate" rather than planned by a lone wolf, as security was strengthened at major domestic and international airports across the nation. "I can report last night that there has been a major joint counter-terrorism operation to disrupt a terrorist plot to bring down an airplane," Turnbull told reporters. |
A Facebook AI Project Developed Its Own Language Posted: 30 Jul 2017 03:19 PM PDT |
China must decide on further action against North Korea: U.S. ambassador to U.N. Posted: 30 Jul 2017 05:25 PM PDT By Michelle Nichols NEW YORK (Reuters) - The United States is "done talking about North Korea" and China must decide if it is willing to back imposing stronger United Nations sanctions on North Korea over its two long-range missile tests this month, U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Nikki Haley said on Sunday. Haley said in a statement that any new U.N. Security Council resolution "that does not significantly increase the international pressure on North Korea is of no value." The United States flew two supersonic B-1B bombers as a show of force after Pyongyang fired a second intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) on Friday. |
The Latest: Van strikes diners on LA sidewalk, 8 injured Posted: 30 Jul 2017 07:33 PM PDT |
Everyone’s favorite AirPods rivals drop to all-time low of $24 on Amazon Posted: 31 Jul 2017 10:08 AM PDT Apple's AirPods are still impossible to get anytime soon, but your frustration just became good fortune. Why? Because instead of spending $159 on AirPods, you can now get everyone's favorite AirPods alternative for the ridiculously low price of just $23.99. The SMARTOMI Q5 True Wireless Earbuds are a steal at their regular price of $40, and hundreds of people ordered them on Prime Day when they dropped to $30. Right now, if you use the coupon code GAYAQFWF at checkout, you can snag a pair for a penny under $24. That's their lowest price ever, and it's only good while supplies last. Here are some highlights from the product page:
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Posted: 31 Jul 2017 04:07 AM PDT The former director of the US Office of Government Ethics said he was "embarrassed" by Donald Trump's alleged conflicts of interest and he was concerned that the White House could be seen as a "kleptocracy". Walter Schaub, who worked at the Office of Government Ethics since 2001, has given a series of candid interviews after he resigned this month about what he describes as the threats to democracy, including the President's attacks on the press and judicial bodies. Speaking to the Guardian, Mr Schaub described the President's use of his hotels to host diplomats and government business as "free advertising", and "risks people starting to refer to us as a kleptocracy". |
A New Tesla Model 3 Will Launch After 'Production Hell' is Over Posted: 31 Jul 2017 04:31 AM PDT |
Two dead, four wounded in M16 shooting at German nightclub Posted: 30 Jul 2017 09:28 AM PDT A Kurdish Iraqi man armed with an M16 automatic rifle opened fire in a packed nightclub in southern Germany early Sunday after a dispute there, killing a bouncer and wounding four people before being shot by police. The 34-year-old attacker "was critically injured in a shootout with police officers as he left the disco, and later succumbed to his wounds in hospital," police said in a statement. "Nothing suggest that there could have been an Islamist or terror background" to the attack at the club, said prosecutor Johannes-Georg Roth. |
AMD Radeon RX Vega 64 vs. GeForce GTX 1080 Posted: 30 Jul 2017 11:53 PM PDT |
Al-Shabab attack on African Union convoy kills 8 in Somalia Posted: 30 Jul 2017 10:24 AM PDT MOGADISHU, Somalia (AP) — Fighters with the al-Shabab extremist group ambushed an African Union convoy in southern Somalia and killed at least eight soldiers on Sunday, a Somali military officer said. The attack came hours after a car bomb in the capital killed at least five people, most of them civilians, shattering a month of relative calm in Mogadishu. |
Alabama police hunt for inmate after peanut butter jail break Posted: 31 Jul 2017 02:23 PM PDT Walker County Sheriff James Underwood said in a phone call that 11 of the 12 missing prisoners had been recaptured, some at a highway truck stop, but 24-year-old Brady Kilpatrick remained a fugitive. Kilpatrick had been in jail facing charges of marijuana possession. Underwood said the men had managed the escape by using peanut butter to switch lettering on cell and outside doors, then told a guard in a control booth, a new employee with only a week on the job, to open the door leading to their freedom. |
Rare sale slashes prices on the two best GoPro cameras Posted: 31 Jul 2017 08:36 AM PDT We've told you time and time again that if money is a concern while you shop for a new action camera, this affordable 4K action cam is the only way to go. It's a high-quality camera that has plenty of great features, and $64 is an unbeatable price. If you have some extra money to spend though, you're still going to get better quality and better features out of a GoPro. And it just so happens that now is the perfect time to buy one. Amazon has rare discounts available on both of GoPro's best cameras, the GoPro HERO5 Black and the GoPro HERO5 Session. You'll find everything you need to know below. GoPro HERO5 Session
GoPro HERO5 Session
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26 Ways To Reinvent Your Mashed Potatoes Posted: 31 Jul 2017 02:47 PM PDT |
Duke and Duchess of Cambridge arrive in Belgium to commemorate 100 years since Passchendaele Posted: 30 Jul 2017 09:01 AM PDT The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge join thousands of relatives of those who fought at the Battle of Passchendaele in a gathering which marks 100 years since it began. The Prince of Wales, Prime Minister Theresa May and Defence Secretary Sir Michael Fallon will also attend events in and around Ypres, Belgium, to commemorate the centenary which cost tens of thousands of British and Commonwealth lives. On Sunday, a ceremony will take place at the Menin Gate in Ypres, which is etched with the names of thousands of missing soldiers. Events will also be held at the Tyne Cot military cemetery on Monday. Early morning sunlight at Tyne Cot Commonwealth War Graves Commission cemetery where events will be held to mark 100 years since the battle Sir Michael said: "These services provide us with the time to reflect on the sacrifice not just of the thousands of British and Commonwealth troops who gave their lives, but of the men on all sides who did not return home. "This was a battle which touched communities across Europe and it is a privilege to be here in Belgium to stand as friends with the representatives of all the countries who took part in the battle - friends who continue to be strong allies." Passchendaele Map The British and Commonwealth attacks were fought near Ypres between July 31 and November 10 1917, in battlefields that turned to liquid mud and were summed up in poet Siegfried Sassoon's line "I died in hell, they called it Passchendaele". More than half a million troops - 325,000 Allied soldiers and 260,000 Germans - died in the battle, officially known as the Third Battle of Ypres, in the West Flanders region of northern Belgium in 1917. Among those to fight in the battle was the "Last Tommy" Harry Patch, who died aged 111 in July 2009. About | The Battle of Passchendaele |
Ganyard on North Korea missile tests: 'We have to take this seriously' Posted: 30 Jul 2017 09:05 AM PDT |
Archbishop of Canterbury declares Sudan new Anglican province Posted: 30 Jul 2017 03:02 PM PDT Archbishop of Canterbury Justin Welby on Sunday declared Sudan the 39th province of the worldwide Anglican Communion, six years after the predominantly Christian south gained independence from the north. The Anglican church in Sudan, a majority Muslim country, has been administered from South Sudan since the 2011 split which followed a civil war that left more than two million people dead. Sunday's ceremony in Khartoum added Sudan to the 85 million-strong worldwide Anglican communion's 38 member churches -- known as provinces -- and six other branches known as extra provincials. |
Apple Taps LG For iPhones’ OLED Displays Posted: 30 Jul 2017 04:16 PM PDT |
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