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Oct 11th, 2021, 7:08 pm
*******The power of determination (true story). ****

A true story about athlete Glenn Cunningham who was horribly burned in a schoolhouse fire at the age of 8. Doctors predicted he would never walk again. Determined to walk, Glenn would throw himself off his wheelchair and pull his body across the yard and along a fence. Twenty-two months later, he took his first steps and through sheer determination, learned to run despite the pain…

The little country schoolhouse was heated by an old-fashioned, pot-bellied coal stove. A little boy had the job of coming to school early each day to start the fire and warm the room before his teacher and his classmates arrived.

One morning they arrived to find the schoolhouse engulfed in flames. They dragged the unconscious little boy out of the flaming building more dead than alive. He had major burns over the lower half of his body and was taken to a nearby county hospital.

From his bed the dreadfully burned, semi-conscious little boy faintly heard the doctor talking to his mother. The doctor told his mother that her son would surely die – which was for the best, really – for the terrible fire had devastated the lower half of his body.

But the brave boy didn’t want to die. He made up his mind that he would survive. Somehow, to the amazement of the physician, he did survive. When the mortal danger was past, he again heard the doctor and his mother speaking quietly. The mother was told that since the fire had destroyed so much flesh in the lower part of his body, it would almost be better if he had died, since he was doomed to be a lifetime cripple with no use at all of his lower limbs.

Once more the brave boy made up his mind. He would not be a cripple. He would walk. But unfortunately from the waist down, he had no motor ability. His thin legs just dangled there, all but lifeless.

Ultimately he was released from the hospital. Every day his mother would massage his little legs, but there was no feeling, no control, nothing. Yet his determination that he would walk was as strong as ever.

When he wasn’t in bed, he was confined to a wheelchair. One sunny day his mother wheeled him out into the yard to get some fresh air. This day, instead of sitting there, he threw himself from the chair. He pulled himself across the grass, dragging his legs behind him.

He worked his way to the white picket fence bordering their lot. With great effort, he raised himself up on the fence. Then, stake by stake, he began dragging himself along the fence, resolved that he would walk. He started to do this every day until he wore a smooth path all around the yard beside the fence. There was nothing he wanted more than to develop life in those legs.

Ultimately through his daily massages, his iron persistence and his resolute determination, he did develop the ability to stand up, then to walk haltingly, then to walk by himself – and then – to run.

He began to walk to school, then to run to school, to run for the sheer joy of running. Later in college he made the track team.

Still later in Madison Square Garden this young man who was not expected to survive, who would surely never walk, who could never hope to run – this determined young man, Dr. Glenn Cunningham, ran the world’s fastest mile**!

Story Told By Burt Dubin,
Developer of Speaking Success System.
Oct 11th, 2021, 7:08 pm

"I took the one less traveled by,
And that has made all the difference."

Robert Frost

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Oct 11th, 2021, 8:54 pm
Kansas Zoo Welcomes Rare Albino Wallaby Joey Named Bruny: 'Doing Wonderful'

Sunset Zoo in Manhattan, Kansas, is now home to two baby wallabies – one of which is albino

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Talk about a cuteness overload!

Sunset Zoo in Manhattan, Kansas, is now home to two baby wallabies – one of which is albino.

On Thursday, the zoo shared a photo of the all-white, pink-eyed joey on Instagram, revealing the sweet news. "We are excited to announce that our new baby 'Bruny,' a rare albino Wallaby, recently emerged from its mother's pouch and doing wonderful!"

Sunset Zoo Head Keeper Savannah Brethauer said albino wallabies, who have little or no melanin production, typically have health problems, such as cancers and sun sensitivity, but so far, Bruny appears to be in good health.

Zookeepers named the baby wallaby after an island off Tasmania in Australia, which experts say is home to a colony of around 200 albino wallabies.

According to a press release, zoo staff believe little Bruny was born in December 2020, but started to emerge from its mother's pouch in late September.

The other baby wallaby, named Arlo, emerged before Bruny, and is the typical brownish-grey color that most wallabies are.

Staff say the zoo is elated to be home to two baby joeys at the same time. Sunset Zoo is already home to three adult wallabies.

"It's really nice getting to see their personalities now that they are fully out of the pouch," said their Keeper, Amelia Jerome. "We have never had two joeys at the same time so it will be fun to see them play and interact with each other."

Zookeepers haven't been able to determine yet if Bruny is male or female, but they do know if you want to catch the joey in action, you better hop to it!
Oct 11th, 2021, 8:54 pm

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Oct 12th, 2021, 8:14 am
Blair Witch Project Most Likely To Cause Insomnia, Experts Find

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The Blair Witch Project will keep you up at night more than any other horror film, according to a new study.

When you’re growing up, the only reputation a film has is the one your parents give it. While we watched quite a few horror movies, there weren’t many my mum found particularly scary – except The Blair Witch Project, which she always mentioned with a wary ‘ooft’.

I vividly remember the first time I watched it: I was 12 years old, and I’d recorded it on my gran’s Sky+ box. She was away out one evening, so I got comfy in the big armchair, turned off all the lights and chucked it on. By the time the credits rolled off that flickering frame, I couldn’t even walk into the dark hallway.

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The sleep experts over at Beds Divans analysed search trends and IMDb review data to find the 25 scariest movies and which one is most likely to get in the way of a good night’s sleep.

‘We analysed over 50,000 reviews on IMDb for the top 25 highest-grossing horror films (worldwide) and tallied up the number of times that words synonymous with ‘scary’ and ‘terrifying’ were used in the reviews,’ the website reads.

The Blair Witch Project topped the leaderboard with a whopping score of 2,805, far ahead of The Ring, The Exorcist, The Conjuring and 2017’s It.

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Released in 1999 and written, directed and edited by Daniel Myrick and Eduardo Sánchez, The Blair Witch Project follows three college students who hike into the Black Hills near Burkittsville, Maryland, to make a documentary about the eponymous legend.

While it’s not the first movie in the found-footage sub-genre of horror, it’s one of the most notable, credited with the craze that followed in the noughties and 2010s. Without Blair Witch, you don’t have Paranormal Activity, basically.

https://www.unilad.co.uk/film-and-tv/bl ... erts-find/
Oct 12th, 2021, 8:14 am

Book request - An Idyll in Sodom by Georges de Lys [7000 WRZ$] Reward!
https://forum.mobilism.org/viewtopic.php?f=72&t=5459036
Oct 12th, 2021, 11:50 am
British man visits 51 pubs in 24 hours for Guinness World Record

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Matt Ellis of St. Neots, England, unofficially set a Guinness World Record with a pub crawl that featured 51 bars being visited in 24 hours. File Photo by Puyato/Shutterstock

Oct. 11 (UPI) -- A British man's pub crawl may have set a new Guinness World Record when he visited 51 bars in 24 hours.

Matt Ellis of St. Neots, Cambridgeshire, England, said Guinness officials told him there is currently no world record for most pubs visited in 12 hours by an individual, so the record-keeping agency set the goal to originate the record at 50.

Ellis said he was required to have witnesses with him at each stop and consume at least 4.2 ounces of any beverage at each establishment.

The pub fan said he visited a total 51 businesses in 8 hours, 52 minutes and 37 seconds.

Evidence from Ellis' pub crawl has been submitted to Guinness World Records for official certification.
Oct 12th, 2021, 11:50 am

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Oct 12th, 2021, 12:45 pm
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I sometimes get REALLY DEPRESSED reviewing the news these days.
It's always about a global pandemic threatening life as we know it,
protests around the world, stupid politicians, natural disasters,
or some other really bad story.
ENOUGH IS ENOUGH

Welcome to The mobi weekly news magazine
IN OTHER NEWS
TUESDAY OCTOBER 12

What is it?
Here is your chance to become an "ACE REPORTER" for our weekly news magazine.
It is your job to fine weird, funny or "good feel" stories from around the world and share them with our readers in our weekly magazine

How do you play?
Just post a story that you have come across that made you smile, laugh, feel good...
BUT NOTHING DEPRESSING :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol:

EXAMPLE POST
Naked sunbather chases wild boar through park after it steals his laptop bag
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A naked sunbather was seen chasing wild boar through a park after it stole his laptop bag.
Amusing photographs from Germany show the man running after the animal to try and claim the plastic bag back.
But the cheeky boar and its two piglets appear to be too quick for the sunbather, who can't keep up with their speedy little trotters.
As the incident unfolds, groups of friends and family sat on the grass watch on and laugh.
Heads are seen turning in surprise and amusement in the hilarious photographs.
The incident happened at Teufelssee Lake - a bathing spot in the Grunwell Forest in Berlin, Germany.

Rules:
Each Edition of IN OTHER NEWS will be open for 7 days...
You can post as many stories as you like, but you will only get paid for One Story in any 24 hour period
So in other words, you can only earn WRZ$ once a day.
Each news day will start when I post announcing it
OR at:
9:00 AM CHICAGO TIME (UTC -5)
2:00 PM GMT (UTC -0)

on those days I space out and forget to post or can't due to Real Life :lol:
Stories may be accompanied with images - but No big images, please! 800x800 pixels wide maximum
Videos are allowed, but please keep them short, and post a short summary for those that don't like to click on videos
No Duplicate stories - Where a post has been edited resulting in duplicates, then the last one in time gets disallowed.
And please limit this to reasonably family friendly stories :lol: :lol: :lol:

Reward:
Each news story posted that I feel is acceptable (must be a real story, too few words or simply a headline are not considered acceptable) will earn you 50 WRZ$
If you post multiple stories on any given day, you will only earn 50 WRZ$ for the first story of the Day
All payments will be made at THE END of the weekly news cycle.
Special Bonus - Each week I will award "The Pulitzer Prize" for the best story of the week
The weekly winner of the "The Pulitzer Prize" will receive a 100 WRZ$ bonus
It's just my personal opinion, so my judgement is final

So help bring GOOD news to the members of mobi, and join our reporting team...

IN OTHER NEWS


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Oct 12th, 2021, 12:45 pm

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Oct 12th, 2021, 12:51 pm
N.J. Parents with 6 Biological Children Adopt 7 Orphaned Siblings from Ukraine: 'A Gift'

"The mood of the house is often chaotic, but full of love and laughter," said mom Michelle Torppey

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A New Jersey family nearly doubled in size recently after the parents of six children decided to adopt seven orphaned siblings from Ukraine.

Wade and Michelle Torppey already had their hands full when they learned about the siblings, who were living in an orphanage in Mokrats after both of their parents died, according to the Morristown Daily Record.

But that didn't stop the couple from bringing Olena, 17, Leeza, 14, Slavik, 12, Alina, 11, Anhelina, 9, Senya, 8, and Jenya, 6, into their hearts — and make Wantage, Sussex County their home.

After years of visits and a delay that was exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic, the siblings were officially adopted into the Torppey family in July, the outlet reported.

"If there's one thing we think we can do well, and other people have told us we do well, that would be being parents," Wade told the Record. "I would like to think that's a gift we have that God gave us, and he's asking us to do it a little longer than we planned."

Added Michelle: "Most people, when we say we adopted seven, they already knew we had six, so they assume we adopted one more. When they hear seven plus six, they go, 'What?' We get a lot of that... The mood of the house is often chaotic, but full of love and laughter."

The Torppey family's journey to adoption began a few years ago after Wade, an ironworker by trade, went on a short volunteer mission in Haiti, according to the Record.

While he was there, Wade bonded with several children who were living in difficult conditions and ultimately became inspired to help others in similar situations.

Around that same time, the Torppeys watched as several members of their longtime congregation, the Lafayette Federated Church, adopted kids through a program by the nonprofit organization Open Hearts and Homes For Children, the outlet reported.

The program allows American families to host orphans from Ukraine and Latvia for Christmas and over the summer. Some people, like their pastor Aaron Robb, became so moved by the experience that they decided to adopt those children they hosted, according to the Record.

"I think [Wade] was looking for a way for the whole family to take in and support and care for some less-fortunate kids," Robb told the outlet. "If anybody can handle it, the Torppeys can."

And they did. In 2017, the Torppeys hosted the group of siblings for Christmas for the very first time. The two youngest boys were too young to travel, so only five siblings came that year, according to the Record.

"Their father died in 2016 and their mother died in 2018," Michelle explained to the outlet. "There were 10 siblings in all. Two had already aged out of the system and one stayed with relatives."

"Right off the bat, I knew this would be something more than just Christmas," said Wade.

After a month, the families parted ways in an emotional goodbye at Dulles Airport near Washington, D.C. The next summer, the siblings returned for a longer, nine-week visit and later made plans to reunite at Christmas 2018, solidifying the parents' desire to take them in as their own. It wasn't until this past July, however, that the adoption was finalized.

"We just have a lot of fun together," Michelle told the Record.

"We certainly have no regrets," Wade added. "It's tough at times and a bit of an adjustment. But when you know their hearts ... For us, it's being obedient to God and what he's put in front of us."

Wade and Michelle have received financial help from their church community, including gift cards for groceries and monetary donations to help pay for their education at Sussex Christian School and Veritas Christian Academy, the outlet reported.

A GoFundMe page was also set up by the eldest Torppey sibling, Taylor Gibson, who is married and now lives in Wisconsin, to help cover private school tuition at Sussex Christian, per the Record.

"Our church family has been absolutely amazing," Michelle told the Record. "We've been overwhelmed. It's a very humbling experience. We like to be the people who are donating. We're not used to being on the receiving end."

Today, the Ukranian siblings are focused on adjusting to their new lives in the U.S., which includes learning English and playing soccer.

"If anyone asks what the primary language in the house is now, I say charades," Michelle joked to the Record. "When all else fails, there's Google Translate on the phone."

As they continue to embrace their new lives and new family, Robb is praising the Torppeys for going above and beyond to change the lives of those seven children.

"They are an absolutely incredible family," he told the Record, "and their story is just inspiring beyond anything I've heard in years."
Oct 12th, 2021, 12:51 pm

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Oct 12th, 2021, 12:53 pm
Heartbreaking moment terminally ill woman, 68, says a last goodbye to her beloved horse and dogs after hospice staff brought them to her death bed

Touching photos show how a terminally ill woman was given the chance to say goodbye to her beloved pet horse and dogs from her hospice bed.

Jan Holman, 68, from Cheshire spent four weeks at the Hospice of the Good Shephard in Chester where she found herself desperately missing her two Cavalier King Charles Spaniels Monty and Rowley and horse Bob, a piebald Cob.

She had been riding Bob everyday until her hospice admission and described him as being 'such an important part of her life'.

Staff decided to surprise her by putting her furry friends on the list to give Jan a heartfelt reunion with her beloved trio.

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Jan Holman, 68, from Cheshire pictured with her horse Bob

Even though Jan, wasn't able to get out of bed, she said she was so excited to have the chance to see Bob one more time.

The nurses wheeled her bed to the patio doors and the team from Thornleigh Park Farm Stables, where Bob is in livery, and walked him into the hospice courtyard for a very emotional reunion between horse and owner.

Bob put his head through the doors and nuzzled Jan's neck and lap and thoroughly enjoyed his treats of carrots, bananas and apples, while Jan's face lit up as soon as she saw Bob.

She said: 'I just can't believe what the staff here at the hospice have done for me.

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Staff brought in Cavalier King Charles Spaniels Monty and Rowley and horse in to visit her

'Until a few weeks ago I was still riding Bob every day and he is such an important part of my life, and I have missed him so much.

'I knew that arranging for my dogs to visit was possible as we had a neighbour who was a patient at the hospice a few years ago and we were allowed to bring the dogs to visit her, but I just didn't expect that they would ever be able to give me the chance to see Bob one more time.'

Jan's husband Dennis, who has been married to Jan for 46 years, said: 'It was just such a relief once Jan was moved from the hospital to the hospice in Chester.

'We were able to have named visitors who could come and see Jan regularly.

'However, we never imagined that we would be able to include our dogs Monty and Rowley and Jan's horse Bob on the visiting list.'

Source
This is so special - we did the same for my late mother-in-law and she was so happy to see our dear little dog one last time.
Mind you, I had to sneak her in, as the hospice staff here are pen-pushing sticklers for "rules".
The rule in this case was made to be broken :lol:
Oct 12th, 2021, 12:53 pm

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Oct 12th, 2021, 1:14 pm
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Artichokes: An Ancient Greek Remedy

The artichoke is a 3,000-year-old detox secret, highly prized over the centuries for its potent medicinal properties.

So highly did the Ancient Greeks and Romans value this rare, edible blossom that it was known as ‘food for the Greek Gods’ and reserved for the aristocratic alone.

In the Middle Ages, this exotic food was considered a treasure that was available only to royalty.

Modern research confirms just how right ancient healers were about the medicinal powers of this thorny, armoured vegetable with the sweet, sensual heart that today we call the artichoke.

Greek Mythology – The First Artichoke

According to Greek mythology, the first artichoke was actually a beautiful, young mortal woman named Cynara who lived on the Aegean island of Zinari.

One day the King of Gods, Zeus was visiting his brother Poseidon, the God of the Sea, when he laid eyes on the very beautiful Cynara as she was bathing on the island shores.

Upon noticing that Cyana was strong, confident and unaffected by his presence, Zeus instantly fell in love with her.

Zeus wanted to meet with Cynara whenever his wife, Hera, was away, so he decided to make her a goddess so that she could be closer to his home on Mount Olympus.

However, Cynara became homesick, so she would occasionally sneak back to briefly visit the mortal world and her family that she so greatly missed.

Upon discovering this un-goddess behaviour, Zeus hurled Cynara back to earth in a fit of jealous rage, however not before he transformed her into the first unusual yet striking artichoke plant, which boasts one of the most stunningly beautiful flowers to grace earthen fields.

The artichoke – the botanical name of which is Cynara – is covered in thorns to protect its vulnerable heart. When flowering, the artichoke plant produces an exquisite spiky, purple blossom – a spectacular flower that fittingly matches the goddess’ beauty.

Although ancient artichokes were very pretty and the flowers very striking, in his jealousy, Zeus hoped that their thorny exterior meant that no one would attempt to search beyond the tough, fibrous, spiky leaves to find Cynara’s sweet, sumptuous heart.

Thus, the artichoke remained untouched and undiscovered for hundreds of years.

However, overcome by curiosity and hunger, humans eventually dared to explore the thorny, armoured vegetable, upon which they discovered its protected edible heart and leaves and were thereby rewarded with its delicious flavour.
Oct 12th, 2021, 1:14 pm
Oct 12th, 2021, 1:24 pm
Horse tattoo mocked as it 'accidentally' looks like something very rude

An image of a horse tattoo has been mocked online as everyone noticed that it looks rather like a penis - and the likeness is so striking it's hard to believe it was a mistake.

The tattoo, which is on someone's left leg, is of a horse's head, which is drooping down and blurred into a treeline so that its eyes and ears are gone.

Below the treeline is the horse's mouth, which is split into two parts, and most people who saw the image thought the lower half looked rather like male genitalia.

The image was shared to the Facebook group That's It, I'm Inkshaming, and people suggested that the tattoo artist may have drawn the penis on purpose - as an insult to the customer.
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One Facebook user said: "That’s a penis. I’ve heard tattoo artists tell me themselves that a lot of them slip dirty things into designs to see if they can get away with it. This looks like one of those to me."

And another added: "This cannot be accidental for the quality of the tattoo and the detail. And that’s actually really f***ing sad and rage-inducing. Someone should really hold that artist responsible. Super not ok."

While a third wrote: "Yep, that’s definitely a PP lol."

"I would love a horse tattoo" added a fourth user. "This ain’t it though."

Meanwhile, an amateur tattooist has gone viral after sharing her first-ever inking - but it didn't go as planned as people flocked to the video to beg her to not do another one.

TikTok star Sam, @descendantofsalemwitches, dreams of one day becoming a professional tattoo artist - but she might have some way to go.

She recently completed her first tattoo on a real-life person, and unveiled it in a TikTok video that has since gone viral, receiving over five million views.

It also received countless comments, mostly from people urging Sam to quit - saying she should have practised more before committing to tattooing someone.
Oct 12th, 2021, 1:24 pm
Oct 12th, 2021, 1:50 pm
Strange radio waves emerge from the direction of the galactic center

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Astronomers have discovered unusual signals coming from the direction of the Milky Way's center. The radio waves fit no currently understood pattern of variable radio source and could suggest a new class of stellar object.

"The strangest property of this new signal is that it is has a very high polarization. This means its light oscillates in only one direction, but that direction rotates with time," said Ziteng Wang, lead author of the new study and a Ph.D. student in the School of Physics at the University of Sydney.

"The brightness of the object also varies dramatically, by a factor of 100, and the signal switches on and off apparently at random. We've never seen anything like it."

Many types of star emit variable light across the electromagnetic spectrum. With tremendous advances in radio astronomy, the study of variable or transient objects in radio waves is a huge field of study helping us to reveal the secrets of the Universe. Pulsars, supernovae, flaring stars and fast radio bursts are all types of astronomical objects whose brightness varies.

"At first we thought it could be a pulsar—a very dense type of spinning dead star—or else a type of star that emits huge solar flares. But the signals from this new source don't match what we expect from these types of celestial objects," Mr Wang said.

The discovery of the object has been published today in the Astrophysical Journal.

Mr Wang and an international team, including scientists from Australia's national science agency CSIRO, Germany, the United States, Canada, South Africa, Spain and France discovered the object using the CSIRO's ASKAP radio telescope in Western Australia. Follow-up observations were with the South African Radio Astronomy Observatory's MeerKAT telescope.

Mr Wang's Ph.D. supervisor is Professor Tara Murphy also from the Sydney Institute for Astronomy and the School of Physics.

Professor Murphy said: "We have been surveying the sky with ASKAP to find unusual new objects with a project known as variables and slow transients (VASTs), throughout 2020 and 2021.

"Looking towards the center of the galaxy, we found ASKAP J173608.2-321635, named after its coordinates. This object was unique in that it started out invisible, became bright, faded away and then reappeared. This behavior was extraordinary."

After detecting six radio signals from the source over nine months in 2020, the astronomers tried to find the object in visual light. They found nothing.

They turned to the Parkes radio telescope and again failed to detect the source.

Professor Murphy said: "We then tried the more sensitive MeerKAT radio telescope in South Africa. Because the signal was intermittent, we observed it for 15 minutes every few weeks, hoping that we would see it again.

"Luckily, the signal returned, but we found that the behavior of the source was dramatically different—the source disappeared in a single day, even though it had lasted for weeks in our previous ASKAP observations."

However, this further discovery did not reveal much more about the secrets of this transient radio source.

Mr Wang's co-supervisor, Professor David Kaplan from the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, said: "The information we do have has some parallels with another emerging class of mysterious objects known as galactic center radio transients, including one dubbed the 'cosmic burper."

"While our new object, ASKAP J173608.2-321635, does share some properties with GCRTs there are also differences. And we don't really understand those sources, anyway, so this adds to the mystery."

The scientists plan to keep a close eye on the object to look for more clues as to what it might be.

"Within the next decade, the transcontinental Square Kilometer Array (SKA) radio telescope will come online. It will be able to make sensitive maps of the sky every day," Professor Murphy said. "We expect the power of this telescope will help us solve mysteries such as this latest discovery, but it will also open vast new swathes of the cosmos to exploration in the radio spectrum."

source: https://phys.org/news/2021-10-strange-radio-emerge-galactic-centre.html
Oct 12th, 2021, 1:50 pm

Twitter @HgwrtzExprss
Join Mobilism Discord server to get instant updates on contests: https://discord.gg/JqD2wAWSGw

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Oct 12th, 2021, 1:51 pm
What Happened on October 12th in History

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October 12 is the 285th day of the year (286th in leap years) in the Gregorian calendar; 80 days remain until the end of the year.

Pre-1600
539 BC – The army of Cyrus the Great of Persia takes Babylon, ending the Babylonian empire. (Julian calendar)
633 – Battle of Hatfield Chase: King Edwin of Northumbria is defeated and killed by an alliance under Penda of Mercia and Cadwallon of Gwynedd.
1279 – The Nichiren Shōshū branch of Buddhism is founded in Japan
1398 – In the Treaty of Salynas, Lithuania cedes Samogitia to the Teutonic Knights.
1406 – Chen Yanxiang, the only person from Indonesia known to have visited dynastic Korea, reaches Seoul after having set out from Java four months before.[5]
1492 – Christopher Columbus's first expedition makes landfall in the Caribbean, specifically in The Bahamas.

1601-1900
1654 – The Delft Explosion devastates the city in the Netherlands, killing more than 100 people.
1692 – The Salem witch trials are ended by a letter from Province of Massachusetts Bay Governor William Phips.
1748 – War of Jenkins' Ear: A British squadron wins a tactical victory over a Spanish squadron off Havana.
1773 – America's first insane asylum opens.
1792 – The first celebration of Columbus Day is held in New York City.
1793 – The cornerstone of Old East, the oldest state university building in the United States, is laid at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
1798 – Flemish and Luxembourgish peasants launch the rebellion against French rule known as the Peasants' War.
1799 – Jeanne Geneviève Labrosse becomes the first woman to jump from a balloon with a parachute.
1810 – The citizens of Munich hold the first Oktoberfest.
1822 – Pedro I of Brazil is proclaimed the emperor.
1849 – The city of Manizales, Colombia, is founded by 'The Expedition of the 20'.
1856 – An M 7.7–8.3 earthquake off the Greek island of Crete cause major damage as far as Egypt and Malta.
1871 – The British in India enact the Criminal Tribes Act, naming many local communities "Criminal Tribes".
1890 – Uddevalla Suffrage Association is formed.
1892 – The Pledge of Allegiance is first recited by students in many US public schools.

1901-present
1901 – President Theodore Roosevelt officially renames the "Executive Mansion" to the White House.
1915 – World War I: British nurse Edith Cavell is executed by a German firing squad for helping Allied soldiers escape from Belgium
1917 – World War I: The First Battle of Passchendaele takes place resulting in the largest single-day loss of life in New Zealand history.
1918 – A massive forest fire kills 453 people in Minnesota.
1928 – An iron lung respirator is used for the first time at Boston Children's Hospital.
1933 – The military Alcatraz Citadel becomes the civilian Alcatraz Federal Penitentiary.
1944 – World War II: The Axis occupation of Athens comes to an end.
1945 – World War II: Desmond Doss is the first conscientious objector to receive the U.S. Medal of Honor.
1945 – The Lao Issara took control of Laos' government and reaffirmed the country's independence.
1959 – At the national congress of the American Popular Revolutionary Alliance in Peru, a group of leftist radicals are expelled from the party who later form APRA Rebelde.
1960 – Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev pounds his shoe on a desk at the United Nations to protest a Philippine assertion.
1960 – Japan Socialist Party leader Inejiro Asanuma is stabbed to death during a live Television broadcast.
1962 – The Columbus Day Storm strikes the U.S. Pacific Northwest with record wind velocities. There was at least U.S. $230 million in damages and 46 people died.
1963 – After nearly 23 years of imprisonment, Reverend Walter Ciszek, a Jesuit missionary, was released from the Soviet Union.
1964 – The Soviet Union launches the Voskhod 1 into Earth orbit as the first spacecraft with a multi-person crew, and the first flight without pressure suits.
1967 – A bomb explodes on board Cyprus Airways Flight 284 while flying over the Mediterranean Sea, killing 66.
1968 – Equatorial Guinea becomes independent from Spain.
1970 – Vietnam War: Vietnamization continues as President Nixon announces that the United States will withdraw 40,000 more troops before Christmas.
1971 – The 2,500 year celebration of the Persian Empire begins.
1979 – Typhoon Tip becomes the largest and most intense tropical cyclone ever recorded.
1983 – Japan's former Prime Minister Tanaka Kakuei is found guilty of taking a $2 million bribe from the Lockheed Corporation, and is sentenced to four years in jail.
1984 – The Provisional Irish Republican Army fail to assassinate Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher and her cabinet. The bomb kills five people and wounds 31.
1988 – Two officers of the Victoria Police are gunned down execution-style in the Walsh Street police shootings, Australia.
1992 – A 5.8 earthquake occurred in Cairo, Egypt. At least 510 died.
1994 – The Magellan spacecraft burns up in the atmosphere of Venus.
1997 – The Sidi Daoud massacre in Algeria kills 43 people at a fake roadblock.
1998 – Matthew Shepard, a gay student at University of Wyoming, dies five days after he was beaten outside of Laramie.
1999 – Pervez Musharraf takes power in Pakistan from Nawaz Sharif through a bloodless coup.
1999 – The former Autonomous Soviet Republic of Abkhazia declares its independence from Georgia.
2000 – The USS Cole, a US Navy destroyer, is badly damaged by two suicide bombers, killing 17 crew members and wounding at least 39.
2002 – Terrorists detonate bombs in the Sari Club in Bali, killing 202 and wounding over 300.
2005 – The second Chinese human spaceflight, Shenzhou 6, is launched, carrying two cosmonauts in orbit for five days.
2010 – The Finnish Yle TV2 channel's Ajankohtainen kakkonen current affairs program featured controversial Homoilta episode (literally "gay night"), which led to the resignation of almost 50,000 Finns from the Evangelical Lutheran Church.
2013 – Fifty-one people are killed after a truck veers off a cliff in Peru.
2017 – The United States announces its decision to withdraw from UNESCO. Israel immediately follows.
2018 – Princess Eugenie marries Jack Brooksbank at St. George's Chapel, Windsor Castle.
2019 – Typhoon Hagibis makes landfall in Japan, killing 10 and forcing the evacuation of 1,000,000 people.
2019 – Eliud Kipchoge from Kenya becomes the first person to run a marathon in less than two hours with a time of 1:59:40 in Vienna.[
2019 – The Hard Rock Hotel in New Orleans, which is under construction, collapses, killing two and injuring 20.
Oct 12th, 2021, 1:51 pm

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Oct 12th, 2021, 1:55 pm
Wisconsin man combines walnut removal service with nut sales

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A Wisconsin man turned a local nuisance into a profitable business by offering his services removing walnuts from yards -- and then selling them.

Jesse Peterson, a Middleton resident and owner of J's Black Walnuts, said he offers his services to residents in Sauk City, Beaver Dam, Verona, Middleton and Belleville to remove black walnuts from their yards free of charge.

Peterson said property owners often see the walnuts as a nuisance, as they can cause hazards for lawn mowers and turn into a mess if they rot on the ground.

He said the walnuts he collects end up in his garage, and once the winter arrives, he spends his time removing the meat to sell on his website for $22 per pound, $11.50 for 8 ounces and $6 for 4 ounces.

Peterson said he also sells the nuts at farmers markets in Promega and Fitchburg. He said other local vendors use his nuts as ingredients for cookies, bread and other foods.

"This is tree to yard to my garage to table," Peterson told the Wisconsin State Journal. "I'm about as big as I can get right now with one person."

https://www.upi.com/Odd_News/2021/10/11 ... 633984063/
Oct 12th, 2021, 1:55 pm

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Believe me, you are someone's crush. Yes, you are!
Oct 12th, 2021, 3:40 pm
Sharks in swimming pool under Christmas tree baffle police called to 'disturbance'

Cops attended the scene in Haywards Heath, West Sussex, and found the fish swimming around a replica Christmas tree plonked in the middle of the pool which was in the property's front room

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Police responding to reports of a disturbance were shocked to arrive at a property and find an eight-foot paddling pool with small sharks swimming around in it.

Cops attended the scene in Haywards Heath, West Sussex, and found the fish swimming around a replica Christmas tree plonked in the middle of the pool which was in the property's front room.

It is as yet unclear whether the sharks were a part of the disturbance report that the police were called for on Friday.

Sussex Police will now try to establish whether the renters tenancy agreement allows for such pets, the Mirror reported.

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Mid Sussex Neighbourhood Policing Inspector Darren Taylor, of Sussex Police, was shocked to hear what his team found.

He wrote on Twitter: "Just when you think you have heard it all! Team attended a premises over the weekend, only to discover a 8ft swimming pool in the front room.

"In the swimming pool (apart from water) were small sharks swimming around and an artificial Christmas tree in the middle! I kid you not!"

One of his social media followers replied: "We're gonna need a bigger bauble," in reference to the iconic line from 1975 film Jaws.

John Lawrence said: "I bet their "Jaws" dropped when they saw that."

Another follower, named Ann, replied: "Was there any people there or were they breakfast.

Deanna Pennington commented: "Please tell me someone started up the chorus for Baby Shark."
Oct 12th, 2021, 3:40 pm

Twitter: Fatima99@fatima99_mobi
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Oct 12th, 2021, 4:31 pm
One Month Later, Five Escaped Zebras Are Still Roaming the Suburbs of Maryland

A long way from their native environment of Africa, these free-roaming zebras seem to like the grass in Maryland just fine

Ben Panko
October 6, 2021

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Imagine looking out into your backyard and seeing zebras: It sounds like something out of a dream or a trippy song from the 1970s. But for the past month, it’s been reality for residents of suburban Maryland.

It all started on August 31, when five of the striped mammals escaped from a private farm in Upper Marlboro, Maryland, reports Michael Levenson of the New York Times.

“When I first heard about it I was like, ‘OK, you’ve got to be kidding me, right? Zebras?’” Rodney Taylor, chief of the Prince George’s County Animal Services Division, told Levenson. In four decades of catching runaway animals, this would be his first experience going after the equine species.

As it turns out, catching zebras is a pretty tricky endeavor. Having evolved to escape predators such as lions on the flat savannah and grasslands of Africa, zebras can run very fast at a moment’s notice. Because of the animal's instinct to flee, animal control officials avoid chasing the animals and instead try to lure them into a corral with enticing snacks of grain. They haven’t had any luck, yet, however.

-Today August (6) asks me to go fishing before sunset. On the way home he calmly says “dad I saw the zebras”
-Something tells me he actually thinks he saw them. So I do a U on Croom Road, pull into some guy’s driveway and…BAM. WILD MARYLAND ZEBRAS @fox5dc @Robert7News pic.twitter.com/uISFfuPOpS
— Joshua DuBois (@joshuadubois) September 20, 2021

In the meantime, Maryland residents have taken to social media to share their encounters with the animals on the lam, reports Dana Hedgpeth of the Washington Post. People have been having fun encountering the animals, with plenty of backyard sightings posted to social media, parents taking their kids zebra hunting, and a nighttime spotting of a zebra crossing the road. (And no, that is not the start of a joke.) Washington, D.C.’s delegate to Congress even released a satirical statement denying responsibility for helping the zebras escape.

In the meantime, however, some have started to wonder how a private farm got zebras in the first place. Like many other exotic animals, it turns out that the mammals were legal to own with a permit from the United States Department of Agriculture, per the Post. The owner of these zebras’ former home in fact owns a 39-strong zeal, which is the name for a group of zebras.

Another concern at the front of people's minds: what could happen if the zebras are never caught? Could they survive a North American winter?

The likely answer is yes, reports Rachel Kurzius of DCist. Some zebras in Africa have been known to live on the high slopes of Mount Kenya, and others have been able to migrate to warmer climates when the temperature drops.

“As with most equids, they have a winter coat. It’ll thicken and keep them warm,” zoologist David Rubenstein of Princeton University told Kurzius. “They have a high metabolism and as long as they have enough food, that’ll serve as fuel and generate heat to keep them warm.”

With plentiful supplies of grass in Maryland and no natural predators, the zebras should be able to survive just fine on their own for as long as they remain free. And as animals prone to running from danger, they most likely shouldn’t present any danger to people who stumble across them. That said, scientists warned folks to keep their distance.

“They’re not going to chase you down,” Taylor told the Post. “But they are zebras, so they’re not handled by people a lot, so to defend themselves they could bite.”
Oct 12th, 2021, 4:31 pm
Oct 12th, 2021, 5:20 pm
Doctor on Chicago flight thought woman may have had food poisoning. Then, he delivered her baby.

A baby was born this week aboard a Turkish Airlines flight from Istanbul, Turkey to Chicago.  

The baby was delivered on Monday by a doctor on board and the the airline's crew on the flight.


He found that the mother was reporting abdominal pain. Although he initially believed the pain was caused by appendicitis or food poisoning, her husband later told Kubilay that she was traveling just weeks before her due date, according to multiple reports.  
The captain of the flight told Kubilay that they could land in Copenhagen, Denmark, but the doctor said there would not be time before the baby was born.

“She was screaming,” Kubilay told NOLA.com. “The entire airplane was scared.” 

The doctor had to rotate the baby during the delivery, but the boy was born safely, and the flight landed in Chicago. A medical team was waiting at the airport for the mother and child.  
The mother named the baby Mehdi, according to multiple reports.  

Kubilay, who works part-time as a neurosurgeon in Turkey and does not practice medicine in the U.S., told NOLA.com that he was originally scheduled to travel a week earlier, but he delayed the trip. 

“If I didn’t change my ticket, I don’t know what happens to that lady,” he said. “Someone or something [larger] arranged for me to be on that airplane.” 

Countries have different policies about whether babies born over their territory automatically receive citizenship. Babies born over U.S. airspace are granted American citizenship. 
This is not the first time in recent months a person has given birth during a commercial flight. One woman, Lavinia Mounga, gave birth in April on a Delta flight from Salt Lake City to Honolulu.  

by Marina Pitofsky, USA Today.
Oct 12th, 2021, 5:20 pm

"I took the one less traveled by,
And that has made all the difference."

Robert Frost

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