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Airline passengers aren’t the only ones: The NFL is telling all teams to pat down fans from the ankles up before they enter stadiums, reports USA Today . In previous seasons, fans endured patdowns only from the waist up. The league’s “enhanced” security procedures come as a Cowboys fan allegedly snuck…

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Palestinians plan to push for full statehood in the UN later this month, and the US vows to block them. Reza Aslan offers five reasons in the Los Angeles Times why America should buck Israel (“it is not political suicide”) and change its mind: Failed talks: Twenty years of negotiations…

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It’s no bigger than your hand, but a Panasonic robot is ready to take on a supersized task: The Evolta, which has already clambered up the walls of the Grand Canyon, will soon take on one of the hardest triathlon courses on the planet. Hawaii’s Ironman Triathlon “is very tough…

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Ever noticed how the trip home from your destination always seems shorter than the trip there? The standard explanation is that on the way back, you’re familiar with the route. But scientists in the Netherlands are contesting that view, offering a different explanation centered on expectations, MSNBC reports. On the…

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College sports uniforms are getting seriously funky as outfitters such as Nike and Under Armor shell out big money to schools only too happy to take it, report the New York Times and Washington Post in similar stories on the trend. Both see the University of Maryland (with 32 possible…

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Divers in Welsh mine rescue forced to turn back

Divers working to free four trapped miners in the Swansea Valley have been forced to return above ground, after being thwarted by murky water Divers who entered a flooded mine to help free four trapped miners have been forced to return above ground, rescuers said. Specialist divers went into the Gleision Colliery near Cilybebyll, Pontardawe in the Swansea Valley, where the men have been trapped since yesterday morning, but had to abandon their efforts after about 30 metres. But rescuers remain optimistic about the welfare of the miners, named by South Wales Police as Phillip Hill, 45, from Neath, Charles Bresnan, 62, David Powell, 50, and Garry Jenkins, 39, all from the Swansea Valley. Gary Evans of the South and Mid Wales Cave Rescue Team said: “We brought in some divers to see whether it was possible to go through and speed things up. “They went into the water to see whether any progress could be made that way, and they went about 20 to 30 metres, but they weren’t able to go any further.” Rescuers had hoped the divers could assess the situation before all the water had been pumped out, but debris had made the water murky, he explained. He confirmed there was still no contact with any of the men but said they remained “very hopeful”. It is believed the miners, trapped 295ft (90m) underground, would have fled to an air pocket to await rescue. Police said emergency services were continuing a “multi-agency rescue operation”, while the men’s families were being supported by family liaison officers. Fresh rescue teams were brought in this morning to relieve crews which had worked strenuously for at least 12 hours straight. An expert listening device, which can detect movement deep underground, is the among the specialist equipment that has been drafted in as part of the efforts. A fifth miner was last night critically ill in hospital after escaping as flood water engulfed the drift mine yesterday. Two other men who were with him escaped largely unharmed and are aiding the rescue operation. The alarm was raised at the pit at around 9.20am yesterday. A retaining wall holding back a body of water underground failed, flooding a tunnel that the seven men were in. Chris Margetts, from South Wales Fire and Rescue Service, said: “What we have determined is the miners are located approximately 90 metres underground. “They are down a 250 metre main route into the mine… There are numerous little tunnels and old workings which all potentially have air pockets in. “They are experienced miners, they know the layout of the mine, they would know where to go in this situation.” He said they were pumping it out and, once they were in a position to search off the main shaft, they would then systematically look through the smaller tunnels and shafts. “The conditions down there are favourable, it’s not raining, there’s water at the bottom but the air supply is good.” He added that rescuers were very “hopeful and optimistic” that the miners could be freed successfully. He said they were constantly monitoring the quality of the air, but could not communicate with the trapped men. An emergency centre has been set up within the community hall in the nearby village of Rhos to cater for the families of the miners. The Red Cross delivered a haul of blankets and pillows to the centre last night. Neath MP and former Labour cabinet minister Peter Hain said he had spoken with family members, many of whom were in tears. He said he had been assured that everything possible was being done to free the trapped men and vowed resources needed would be brought in to help the rescue efforts. “Nothing is more important than the lives of these men,” he said. He added that he had been given regular updates on the situation himself by the on-scene police commander and rescue crews. “They tried initially to get into the tunnel that the men use to go in and out of the mine but it was blocked with water,” he said. “They have subsequently tried the mine’s air tunnel but there was insufficient oxygen so now they are pumping oxygen in and water out.” Parish priest Martin Perry hailed the spirit of the community and said there was a “real sense of hope” that the miners could be rescued. He told Sky News: “People here are very resilient. On the one hand they are very realistic about the dangerous situation the folk are in, but they have a real sense of hope that things can turn out positively.” Wales guardian.co.uk

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Last year, Kevin Keller became Archie Comics’ first openly gay character ; now, he’s getting hitched, On Top Magazine reports. “Kevin followed in his father’s footsteps and is returning to Riverdale as a war hero,” the comic company says in a press release. “But that’s not all—It’s Kevin’s wedding day!…

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Traditional measures of success in high school—GPAs, standardized-test scores—aren’t always good predictors of a successful future. That’s why the heads of two very different schools in New York City are searching for a way to mix character into the education equation. In a lengthy New York Times Magazine…

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Duane Buck Texas execution halted by supreme court

Duane Buck’s execution was halted after his lawyers contended his sentence was unfair because of a question asked about race during his trial Duane Buck, an inmate on Texas’s death row for the past 16 years, has been spared the lethal injection after the US supreme court stepped in and stayed his execution on the grounds that the jury at his sentencing hearing was told he was a danger to the public because he is black. The fact that it took the highest court in the nation to prevent the judicial killing of a prisoner in such controversial circumstances will put the governor of Texas, Rick Perry, further under the spotlight. He was earlier approached by lawyers of Buck and exhorted to use his power to put a 30-day reprieve on the execution to give time for all parties to look at his case, but Perry did not act. Perry, a frontrunner for the Republican nomination for next year’s presidential election, has presided over 235 executions since he became governor in 2000, the most recent just on Tuesday. Last week he defended his record at a presidential nomination debate at which the Republican TV audience cheered when the number of those who had died under him was mentioned. Buck, 48, killed his former girlfriend and a man in 1995. His guilt is not in dispute, but the fashion in which he was handed out the death penalty is. The jury that gave him the ultimate punishment was told by a psychologist, under prosecution cross-examination, that black people pose a greater risk to violent reoffending if released from jail. Buck is an African-American. The evidence of the psychologist, Dr Walter Quijano, was recognised as a huge legal problem by Texas’s then attorney general John Cornyn in 2000. Six other cases in which Quijano had given racially-tinged testimony were identified and all of them were awarded a resentencing hearing. On legal technicalities, Buck has been awarded no such safeguard. The intervention of the US supreme court gives the prisoner one last chance to plead for commutation of his sentence to life imprisonment. The issue of the death penalty is by no means at an end in Texas, however. The state executes more people each year than any other state in the nation, and has two executions scheduled for next week. Texas United States Capital punishment Human rights Rick Perry Ed Pilkington guardian.co.uk

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Netflix is taking its lumps today over its price hike and plan changes. After the company announced that it expects to have 1 million fewer US subscribers than projected at the end of the third quarter—24 million, instead of 25 million—its shares slid about 15%, reports MarketWatch . The…

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