Friday, 29 August 2014

Museum to display 6,500-year-old human skeleton


FILE - In this Aug. 5, 2014, file photo, 6,500-year-old human remains are displayed at the The Penn Museum, part of the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia. The public will soon get to see an ancient human skeleton beginning Saturday Aug. 30, 2014, at the University of Pennsylvania's Penn Museum. (AP Photo/Matt Rourke)
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FILE - In this Aug. 5, 2014, file photo, 6,500-year-old human remains are displayed at the The Penn Museum, part of the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia. The public will soon get to see an ancient human skeleton beginning Saturday Aug. 30, 2014, at the University of Pennsylvania's Penn Museum. (AP Photo/Matt Rourke)
PHILADELPHIA (AP) — The public will soon get to see an ancient human skeleton recently rediscovered in a Philadelphia museum's storage room.
Visitors can look at the 6,500-year-old remains beginning Saturday at the University of Pennsylvania's Penn Museum.
Archaeologists first excavated the specimen from southern Iraq around 1930. But it sat for decades in the museum's basement without any documentation.
Museum officials confirmed its origins this summer while digitizing their collection.
The skeleton will be displayed in the museum's Artifact Lab. The space allows people to watch as conservators work to preserve artifacts and mummies.
Researchers believe the bones belong to a 50-year-old man from the Ubaid period, which lasted from 5500 to 4000 B.C. Complete human skeletons from that era are rare.

'Brangelina' marry in secret French wedding

Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt, seen at the premiere of Disney's 'Maleficent', in Hollywood, California, on May 28, 2014
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Los Angeles (AFP) - Hollywood power couple Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt finally tied the knot after nine years together at a secret wedding in the south of France described as a "family affair" with their six children.
The A-list Oscar winners were married by a US judge on Saturday in a small chapel at Chateau Miraval, in the picturesque village of Correns, a spokeswoman for the Tinseltown royal couple said.
George Clooney was among the celebrity friends to congratulate them. "I'm really happy for Brad and Angie and their whole family," said the 53-year-old veteran bachelor, who announced his own engagement in April.
Jolie was walked down the aisle by her eldest sons Maddox and Pax. Daughters Zahara and Vivienne threw petals, while the couple's other two children, Shiloh and Knox, were the ring bearers.
"It was very much a family affair," the spokeswoman said in a statement.
Pitt, 50, and Jolie, 39, obtained a marriage license in California from a local US judge who traveled to France to conduct the wedding, which was described as a "non-denominational civil ceremony."
Pitt was photographed Thursday wearing a gold band on his left ring finger during an event in Britain to promote his new World War II film "Fury," in which he plays a battle-hardened army sergeant.
He and Jolie fell in love on the set of 2005 action film "Mr & Mrs Smith" -- spawning the media phenomenon of "Brangelina" that has dominated celebrity journalism and the tabloids ever since.
Earlier this year, Jolie told People Magazine that she and Pitt were "not really in a rush" to get married, adding: "We're just waiting for it to be the right time with the kids, with work, when it feels right."
- Third time lucky? -
Jolie -- the daughter of Oscar-winning actor Jon Voight -- will be hoping to make it third time lucky: she was previously married to actors Jonny Lee Miller and Billy Bob Thornton.
Her acting career has seen her play everything from a fairytale villain ("Maleficent") to a sexy video game heroine ("Lara Croft: Tomb Raider") to the widow of assassinated American journalist Daniel Pearl ("A Mighty Heart").
The actress revealed last year that she had had a double mastectomy to reduce her high risk of breast cancer, garnering widespread support and praise.
Pitt got his big break more than 20 years ago with a much-talked-about shirtless eye-candy role in the hit movie "Thelma and Louise" as the two-bit thief who seduces Geena Davis.
He has received three Oscar nominations: in 1996 for "Twelve Monkeys," in 2009 for "The Curious Case of Benjamin Button" and in 2012 for "Moneyball."
This year, Pitt took home an Academy Award as one of the producers of best picture for "12 Years a Slave."
Pitt was previously married to "Friends" star Jennifer Aniston -- a Hollywood super-pairing that fizzled out at about the same time as Pitt met Jolie.
The supercouple are now working on "By the Sea," their first on-screen appearance together since "Mr & Mrs Smith." The movie is to be filmed in Malta.
Their children are Maddox, 13; Pax, 11; Zahara, 9; Shiloh, 8; and six-year-old twins Knox and Vivienne. Maddox, Pax and Zahara are adopted.
- Tabloid queen to UN -
Pop culture expert Robert Thompson said the couple were just cementing their role as Hollywood super couple. "It should be called Brand-gelina," he told AFP, adding: "They are in a category of their own."
Jolie once delighted gossip columnists by declarations of bisexuality and quirky behavior such as wearing a vial of Thornton's blood around her neck during their 2000-2003 marriage.
The red carpet darling is now however better known for her humanitarian work than for her tabloid-ready comments.
Jolie long served as a goodwill ambassador for the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees.
In 2012, she was promoted to special envoy and has visited refugees around the world, from Syria to the Democratic Republic of Congo and Rwanda.
More recently, she has been a vocal advocate for victims of sexual violence in war zones, co-hosting a global summit on conflict rape in June in London.
Of her life with Pitt and their children, Jolie told People in May: "We've been through so much, we've gotten a lot closer, which I think naturally happens with raising a family together."
"You have this person you live with who really knows you, and you know them so well. You're not lovers or boyfriend and girlfriend as much as you are a family," she added.

No criminal charges in fatal gun range shooting by 9-year-old girl

Shooting instructor Charles Vacca stands next to a 9-year-old girl at the Last Stop shooting range in White Hills
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Shooting instructor Charles Vacca stands next to a 9-year-old girl at the Last Stop shooting range in …

But state occupational health and safety officials were conducting their own probe of the Monday morning incident that was captured on video at a gun range that caters in part to tourists visiting nearby Las Vegas.WHITE HILLS Ariz. (Reuters) - County law enforcement officials in Arizona said on Thursday no criminal charges are pending after a probe into a gun range incident in which a 9-year-old girl fatally shot her instructor with an Uzi, adding it was "being viewed as an industrial accident."
The shooting at the Arizona Last Stop in White Hills, near the Nevada border, has touched off debate over shooting ranges offering machine guns to casual visitors and the wisdom of giving children access to high-powered firearms.
"Based on the video, the Sheriff's Office has determined no charges are pending," the Mohave County Sheriff's Office said in a statement, adding that the shooting was "being viewed as an industrial accident."
A video clip released by the sheriff's office of the moments just before the fatal shooting and circulating on the Internet shows Charles Vacca giving a girl in pink shorts and a braided ponytail hands-on instruction as she aims the Uzi at a black and white target shaped like the silhouette of a man.
Vacca is heard encouraging the girl and asking her to squeeze off one shot. Then he tells her, "All right, full auto" and the weapon unleashes multiple rounds as the video cuts off.
It was apparently moments later that Vacca was shot in the head when the girl lost control of the submachine gun.
Vacca, 39, had been standing next to the girl when the recoil forced her arm over her head, the sheriff's office said. Authorities have not said how many times Vacca was hit but NBC News reported he was killed by a single bullet to the head.
A spokeswoman for the Arizona Division of Occupational Safety and Health confirmed that the agency was investigating the incident, but said state law prevented her from disclosing details.
'WHERE CAN I SHOOT A MACHINE GUN?'
Some Uzi models are capable of firing up to 1,700 rounds per minute, or almost 30 rounds per second, according to the manufacturer’s website.
The Last Stop, a tourist hub that also includes a restaurant, bar, RV park and general store and is decorated with paintings of firearms, faux bullet holes and crosshairs and a mural depicting a gun-toting Sylvester Stallone in the film "Rambo."
An employee at the scene said the range had resumed operations but gave no further comment, and gunfire could be heard coming from inside. The Arizona Republic had earlier reported the range was closed following the incident.
Owners of the gun range could not be reached for comment by Reuters on Thursday.
The girl, whom police did not identify, was at the outdoor range with her parents while visiting Nevada from New Jersey.
Arizona Last Stop has a “Burgers and Bullets” program that offers customers lunch with a trip to the range, where they can choose from among more than 20 automatic weapons to shoot, according to its website.
The website shows the packages available for the shooting range, which is described as having a "unique 'Desert Storm' atmosphere," and says each group gets a "certified ex-military firearms instructor." It lists the minimum age as 8.
Scott Edwards, a former Las Vegas bus driver visiting the Last Stop on Thursday, said such gun ranges were popular with tourists visiting from out of state.
"One of biggest questions I got from all over the world is where can I shoot a machine gun?" Edwards said.
Bob Irwin, who owns the Gun Store in Las Vegas, which he said was the oldest range offering machine guns in the city, said his facility had no age restrictions, instead using strength and weight as a metric.
Irwin said Gun Store instructors were trained to hold the firearm for the child, who just pulled the trigger.
"There's no way a child that small is going to handle the vibration and motion of that gun," Irwin said.
(Reporting by Alexia Shurmur in White Hills and Dan Whitcomb in Los Angeles; Writing by Dan Whitcomb; Editing by Cynthia Johnston, Leslie Adler and Eric Walsh)

The Last Stop outdoor shooting range

 This July 28, 2012 file photo provided by Bob MacDuff shows Lindsae MacDuff holding an automatic weapon at the Gun store in Las Vegas after her "shotgun wedding." Tourists from Japan flock to ranges in Waikiki, Hawaii, and the dozen or so that have cropped up in Las Vegas offer bullet-riddled bachelor parties and literal shotgun weddings, where newly married couples can fire submachine gun rounds and pose with Uzis and ammo belts. (AP Photo/Bob MacDuff, FILE)
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The death of an Arizona firearms instructor by a 9-year-old girl who was firing a fully automatic Uzi displayed a tragic side of what has become a hot industry in the U.S.: gun tourism.
With gun laws keeping high-powered weapons out of reach for most people — especially those outside the U.S. — indoor shooting ranges with high-powered weapons have become a popular attraction.

Japan hangs gangster and killer arsonist


Japanese Justice Minister Sadakazu Tanigaki arrives for a press conference in Tokyo to announce the execution of a mobster and a killer arsonist, August 29, 2014
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Japan executed a mobster and a killer arsonist on Friday, bringing to 11 the total number of death sentences carried out since Prime Minister Shinzo Abe took power in 2012.
The executions came days before Abe is expected to reshuffle his cabinet amid speculation that he will appoint a new justice minister, whose approval is needed for any sentence to be carried out.
"I ordered the executions after prudent consideration," Justice Minister Sadakazu Tanigaki told reporters.
The executed men were both multiple killers.
Tsutomu Takamizawa, 59, a gang boss in the Yamaguchi-gumi, Japan's largest yakuza grouping, was convicted of shooting three people dead between 2001 and 2005, the justice ministry said.
Mitsuhiro Kobayashi, a 56-year-old former taxi driver, was convicted of killing five people and seriously injuring four others in 2001 by setting fire to a consumer loan office, in Aomori, northern Japan.
Apart from the United States, Japan is the only major industrialised democracy to use capital punishment.
Surveys have shown the death penalty has overwhelming public support, despite repeated protests from European governments and human rights groups.
Tokyo did not execute anyone in 2011, the first full year in nearly two decades without an execution amid muted debate on the rights and wrongs of the practice.
But in March 2012 it abruptly resumed its use of capital punishment, dispatching three multiple murderers.
International advocacy groups say Japan's system is cruel because inmates can wait for their executions for many years in solitary confinement and are only told of their impending death a few hours ahead of time.
There have been a number of high-profile miscarriages of justice exposed in recent years, including the case of Iwao Hakamada, who was released from jail in March, aged 78, after decades on death row for a multiple murder he did not commit.
Hakamada, who was believed to be the world's longest-serving death row inmate, was the victim of a flawed investigation in which evidence was fabricated.
Japan now has 125 inmates on death row, according to local media.

Thursday, 28 August 2014

15 Travel DIYs That Make Leaving Home Easier


All photos courtesy of POPSUGAR Smart Living
Whether on vacation or a business trip, traveling can sometimes be challenging.
That said, we've rounded up a few DIYs — concerning everything frompacking all the right stuff to only bringing travel-size versions of all your favorite products — that might help ease travel tension, making leaving home a little bit easier.
#1. Washcloth Travel Kit
DIY this easy travel kit from a dollar store washcloth, and you have a smart way to take all your essentials with you.
#2. Single-Use Packets
All you need are a few straws, scissors, a lighter, and your favorite products to make these easy-to-use single-use packets.
#3. Single-Serve Coffee
If you really love your coffee, make these easy single-serve coffee pods with the help of coffee filters so you can have your favorite cup of joe while on the road.
#4. Scented Travel Candles
Sometimes hotel rooms don't smell so fresh, which makes these adorable travel candles a smart way to refresh any space.
#5. Sleep Mask
Along with being so soothing, this DIY eye mask also helps you fall asleep fast.
#6. Mini Lotions
Instead of lugging around your big container of lotion while traveling, make mini lotion bars instead.
#7. Fresh Breath
Mix together this easy all-natural spray that keeps your breath fresh, no matter where you are.
#8. Stain Stick
Stains happen — even while traveling. DIY a mini stain stick that you can bring anywhere.
#9. Homemade Tea Bags
Mix together your favorite blend of tea in homemade tea bags so you have them while traveling.
#10. All-In-One Laundry Bombs
No need to bring laundry detergent, fabric softener, and stain remover: make these all-in-one laundry bombs that are so compact, making them easy to pack when traveling.

US star Danielle Collins takes shock Miami Open win in emotional farewell season

Danielle Collins enjoyed a fairytale Miami Open this week, winning one of the biggest titles of her career and accomplishing one of her ma...