Investigators have a suspect in the case of a string of spruce and pine tree deaths across the country—DuPont’s Imprelis herbicide. The EPA approved limited sales of the herbicide, thought to be safe for the environment, last fall. However, reports of thousands of dying trees have led the company…
Continue reading …Odds are, if you smoke in public these days, you’ll get some dirty looks. For the first time ever, the majority of Americans support a ban on smoking in all public places, according to a new Gallup poll. But while 59% support such a ban, only 19% think smoking should…
Continue reading …Rupert Murdoch has taken a step toward convincing the world he is, in fact, a human being. The embattled media mogul has apologized to the family of Milly Dowler, the schoolgirl murdered in 2002 whose phone was allegedly hacked by Murdoch’s News of the World . He met with the family…
Continue reading …The girlfriend of a pharmaceutical company executive was found dead at a historic California mansion, her nude body hanging from a rope on a second-floor balcony with her hands tied behind her back and her feet bound. Rebecca Nalepa’s body was discovered at the Coronado home of Jonah Shacknai, founder,…
Continue reading …Video game reviews don’t get much more enthusiastic than this. Seth Schiesel of the New York Times is over the moon about Shadow Cities, a new iPhone game that lets you battle for control of your real-life physical location. “Shadow Cities isn’t just the future of mobile gaming,” he gushes….
Continue reading …In honor of Harry Potter’s last cinematic outing—and the debt ceiling negotiations playing out in Washington—David Rothkopf of Foreign Policy has come up with a list of the top 10 ways Washington is worse than Hogwarts: Peter Pettigrew was only a rat sometimes. Unlike politicians like Mitch McConnell,…
Continue reading …Once you’re in with Emmy voters, you’re probably in forever—but getting in is the hard part. Not everyone is happy with this year’s list of nominees . “The academy’s membership snubs good people and shows while rewarding the same favorites (some deserving, others not) time and time again,” writes Matt…
Continue reading …Glee fans were surprised this week when they found out three of the show’s biggest stars would not return after graduating at the end of the upcoming season. Well, it turns out at least one of those stars was equally surprised: Chris Colfer, who plays Kurt, tells Access Hollywood he…
Continue reading …An amateur sleuth on a personal mission helped crack the case of 8-year-old Leiby Kletzky and led cops to his suspected killer. Yaakov German, a 47-year-old property manager, traced Leiby’s path from a day camp by convincing business owners and residents to let him inspect security camera footage that ended…
Continue reading …Second phase of Chávez’s cancer treatment may include chemotherapy or radiation treatment Venezuelan president Hugo Chávez announced on Friday that he will return to Cuba to begin a new phase of cancer treatment that may include chemotherapy. Chávez said he would go to Havana on Saturday “to begin what we’ve called the second phase”. He said he was sending a letter to the president of Venezuela’s national assembly, Fernando Soto Rojas, to seek immediate “legislative authorisation” for his trip as required by the constitution. It was not clear how long Chávez planned to remain in Cuba. The 56-year-old’s cancer diagnosis has thrown Venezuela’s political landscape into uncertainty in the past two weeks. Chávez, who has been a dominant force for his more than 12 years in office, has assured the country that he is confident he will recover while also saying that a long road to recovery remains. Chávez underwent surgery in Cuba on 20 June to remove a cancerous tumour from his pelvic region. He has said the tumour was the size of a baseball. Chávez had aknowledged on Wednesday for the first time that he expected eventually to undergo chemotherapy or radiation treatment. He announced his plans to travel to Cuba after meeting with Peruvian president-elect Ollanta Humala at the presidential palace. Humala wished Chávez the best in “this personal battle you are leading”. The revelation of his trip to Cuba came after reports from Brazil said the Venezuelan leader could undergo his next round of treatment at the Sirio-Libanes hospital in São Paulo, which is considered one of the best hospitals in South America. As they began their meeting at the presidential palace, Humala told Chávez: “Count on our prayers.” “You still have to fulfil a mission with your people as president,” Humala said before they walked into the palace together. Chaávez has kept up near-daily public remarks in the past week while shortening the length of his televised speeches, saying he is under strict doctors’ orders. He has abandoned his usual late-night speeches, though on Thursday he spoke to a crowd of supporters and led a cabinet meeting. Chávez told state television on Friday that while recovering from surgery, he has been waking up at 5am and reading the German philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche. He said he has taken up painting again and has been creating a landscape from one of the windows of the presidential palace. “I know there are people who are happy because they believe I’m dying, that I’m going to die soon,” Chávez said. “But those evil wishes are part of that hatred … that is erased like a tsunami of love by the blessings and prayers of a nation, of millions.” Hugo Chávez Venezuela Cuba Cancer guardian.co.uk
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