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  • Passer-by rescues boy after SUV skids into Indianapolis pond

    Authorities say a passer-by rescued a 4-year-old boy from a retention pond in Indianapolis after his family's SUV apparently slid from an icy bridge into the frigid water

  • Hundreds of bodies exhumed from mass grave in Syria's Raqqa

    A local official in Raqqa says more than 500 bodies have so far been exhumed from one of the largest mass graves discovered near the Syrian city, once the capital of the Islamic State group's self-styled caliphate

  • Coal mining's future divides Poles ahead of climate talks

    Residents in Poland's southern coal mining region that will host global clime talks next month are debating the industry's pros and cons while the government says it needs to rely on the fuel for decades to come

  • Instagram posts suggest e-scooter companies like Bird aren't promoting safe riding to newbies

    (The Conversation is an independent and nonprofit source of news, analysis and commentary from academic experts.) Jon-Patrick Allem, University of Southern California(THE CONVERSATION) Since emerging in the U.S. last year, electric scooters have become an increasingly popular way for people to travel short distances, thanks to their speed and convenience. But they’ve also generated controversy and concerns about their safety. Recently, nine people who say they’ve been injured by e-scooters

  • The key to fixing the gender gap in math and science: Boost women's confidence

    (The Conversation is an independent and nonprofit source of news, analysis and commentary from academic experts.) Lara Perez-Felkner, Florida State University(THE CONVERSATION) The gender gap in math and science isn’t going away. Women remain less likely to enroll in math-heavy fields of study and pursue math-heavy careers. This pattern persists despite major studies finding no meaningful differences in mathematics performance among girls and boys. Among U.S. students who score the same on math

  • How local journalism can upend the 'fake news' narrative

    (The Conversation is an independent and nonprofit source of news, analysis and commentary from academic experts.) Damian Radcliffe, University of Oregon(THE CONVERSATION) “For the first time media is the least trusted institution globally,” Edelman, the global PR and marketing firm concluded in its annual worldwide study on trust in institutions like the media, business and government.These international findings are in line with recent data coming out of the U.S. A 2016 Gallup poll reported

  • Kim Kardashian West and ecstasy: A reminder of the social dangers of the drug

    (The Conversation is an independent and nonprofit source of news, analysis and commentary from academic experts.) Joseph Palamar, New York University Langone Medical Center (THE CONVERSATION) Kim Kardashian West, who has a reputation for disdaining alcohol, discussed her past use of the drug ecstasy on a recent segment of “Keeping Up with the Kardashians.” “I did ecstasy once, and I got married … I did it again, I made a sex tape … like, everything bad would happen,” she explained. We often

  • Living drugs: Engineering bacteria to treat genetic diseases

    (The Conversation is an independent and nonprofit source of news, analysis and commentary from academic experts.) Pedro Belda Ferre, University of California San Diego(THE CONVERSATION) A pill containing millions of bacteria ready to colonize your gut might be a nightmare to many. But it may become an effective new tool for fighting disease. In many inherited genetic diseases a mutated gene means that an individual cannot make a vital substance necessary for their body to grow, develop or

  • Why Twitter's cute, heart-shaped 'like' button is not so harmless

    (The Conversation is an independent and nonprofit source of news, analysis and commentary from academic experts.) A. Trevor Sutton, Concordia Seminary(THE CONVERSATION) Jack Dorsey, Twitter’s founder and CEO, was recently reported to have questioned how the site “incentivizes people to want (the number of likes on their posts) to go up.” He also said that “he was not a fan of the heart-shaped (‘like’) button and that Twitter would be getting rid of it ‘soon.’” Twitter has since released a

  • Why aren't there electric airplanes yet?

    (The Conversation is an independent and nonprofit source of news, analysis and commentary from academic experts.) Venkat Viswanathan, Carnegie Mellon University; Shashank Sripad, Carnegie Mellon University, and William Leif Fredericks, Carnegie Mellon University(THE CONVERSATION) As electric cars and trucks appear increasingly on U.S. highways, it raises the question: When will commercially viable electric vehicles take to the skies? There are a number of ambitious efforts to build

  • Shah's 14 wickets lead Pakistan to innings win over NZ

    Legspinner Yasir Shah's rich match haul of 14-184 earned Pakistan an emphatic innings and 16-run victory over New Zealand in the second test on Tuesday

  • Maldives court annuls conviction of former president

    The Maldives' top court has annulled a conviction for the country's former president on terror charges that carried a 13-year prison sentence

  • Uber fined nearly $1.2 million by Dutch, UK over data breach

    The ride-hailing service Uber has been fined the equivalent of nearly $1.2 million by British and Dutch authorities for failing to protect customers' data during a cyberattack in 2016

  • Belgium investigates doctors who euthanized autistic woman

    Belgian officials say doctors might have improperly euthanized a woman with autism, the first time the country has investigated whether or not physicians performing euthanasia might have broken the law since the practice was legalized in 2002

  • The Latest: Saudi prince gets warm welcome in Egypt

    Egypt's president and Saudi Arabia's crown prince have held talks in Cairo, the latest stop on Mohammed bin Salman's first foreign tour since the killing of Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi

  • Sleeping pilot overflies Australian island destination

    Airline officials say a pilot is under investigation after falling asleep in the cockpit of a freight plane and overflying his Australian island destination by 46 kilometers (29 miles)

  • Politician, ex-codebreaker Baroness Trumpington dies at 96

    British socialite, codebreaker, politician and bon vivant Jean Baker _ better known by her title, Baroness Trumpington _ has died

  • Britain's Prince Harry meets military veterans in Zambia

    Britain's Prince Harry meets military veterans in Zambia at events marking WWI and WWII

  • Contender to lead Merkel's party takes heat from rivals

    A top contender for the leadership of Chancellor Angela Merkel's center-right party is taking heat from his rivals for saying that the party had accepted the rise of the far-right Alternative for Germany "with a shrug of the shoulders."

  • Macron says France will delay cap on nuclear energy

    French President Emmanuel Macron says the country will move more slowly than promised to cap the amount of energy it derives from nuclear energy

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