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Aug 17th, 2022, 10:48 pm
The Man Who Built a 40-Foot Spite Fence Around His Neighbor’s Home
MentalFloss*

When Nicholas Yung wouldn't sell his land to railroad baron Charles Crocker, Crocker built a 40-foot fence around his house and blotted out the sun.

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Photo courtesy of the Gawain Weaver Art Conservation. The original photo by Eadweard Muybridge is held at the Society of California Pioneers.

Nicholas Yung considered himself a lucky man. A German who immigrated to the United States in 1848, Yung had worked hard to carve out a living for himself and eventually prosper as the owner of a mortuary in San Francisco. The business allowed him and wife Rosina to purchase a modest lot on the top of California Street Hill, where they built a quaint, cottage-style home and planted a beautiful garden. Every day, California sunlight and fresh air would stream in through their windows.

Yung had no reason to believe that anything could interrupt his idyllic life, or that any one person could somehow deprive him of the beautiful days he had worked so hard to enjoy. But Yung also hadn’t accounted for Charles Crocker, a very rich and very petty man who would eventually become both his neighbor and the bane of his existence. With enough lumber to build a 40-foot-tall, blighting fence around much of Yung’s property, Crocker and his spite fence became a legendary revenge tale, a tourist attraction, and a lesson in the danger of escalating tempers.

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Spite fence enthusiast Charles Crocker. Photo from Wikimedia Commons.

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At 6 feet tall and 300 pounds, Charles Crocker cut an imposing figure. He had filled his bank account by being one of the "Big Four" barons behind the building of the Central Pacific Railroad. By the 1870s, he could afford whatever he desired. And what he wanted was to loom over San Francisco like a gargoyle.

Crocker and his wealthy partners began scouting California Street Hill for its scenic views and proximity to the city’s financial district. One of his "Big Four" associates, Leland Stanford—former governor of California and future founder of Stanford University—suggested that the area would make for a beautiful residential plot if a cable car could bring residents up and down the hill. Stanford arranged to have one installed, and soon a group of wealthy men, including Crocker, were buying up all the homes on their chosen blocks. By the time Crocker was finished, he had erected a 12,000-square-foot mansion. With its new, wealthy inhabitants, California Street Hill was renamed Nob Hill.

As the project neared completion in 1876, there was one nagging detail: On the northeast corner of the block, Nicholas Yung was reluctant to sell. His cottage was dwarfed by the mansions going up, but he had come to enjoy the neighborhood.

There are varying accounts of what happened next. Some say Crocker offered Yung $6000 for his slice of the block. After some deliberation, Yung agreed to sell the land for $12,000. Crocker countered with $9000; Yung declined. The other story is that Yung became irascible, agreeing to a $3000 transaction and then bumping up his price every time Crocker capitulated, first to $6000, then $9000, and finally $12,000. At this latter figure, Crocker was said to have balked, spewing profanity and walking away from negotiations.

With one or both men causing acrimony, the end result was that Yung was not moving. Crocker's workers were busy razing the entire block, creating a steamroller of activity that should have seen them swatting Yung’s cottage down like a cardboard box. In an ominous sign of his frustration, Crocker ordered his workers to arrange their dynamite blasts so that rock debris would pelt Yung’s house.

If the goal was to drive Yung away, it had the opposite effect. Yung doubled down, refusing to move. Crocker refused to raise his offer. The two men were at a stalemate. Although Yung's obnoxious negotiating methods didn't make him blameless, it was Crocker who had the means to provide a real disruption.

At a reported cost of $3000, Crocker had his workers construct a wooden fence on his land that towered over three sides of Yung’s home. With its 40-foot-tall panels, the enclosure acted like a window shade, blotting out the sun and cool air and immersing Yung in darkness.

While Crocker gleefully had gardeners decorate his side with ivy, Yung saw his beautiful garden wilt. Despite the obvious interruption of Yung's environment, Crocker’s “spite fence,” as the papers came to call it, was perfectly legal.

Without other recourse, Yung threatened to install a flagpole that would fly a skull and crossbones, an act of defiance that might help blight Crocker’s view; he also wanted to place a coffin on his roof, ostensibly for advertising his business, but clearly to agitate Crocker as well. He had some members of the media on his side, who condemned “Crocker’s Crime” and criticized the financier for using his immense wealth to bully a family of more modest means. The San Francisco Chronicle later called it a “memorial of malignity and malevolence.” Tourists would take the cable car and ride up to Nob Hill just to gawk at the massive fence. But Crocker wouldn’t budge.

In October 1877, the pro-labor Workingmen’s Party of California (WPC) organized a protest rally near Crocker’s home. Condemning his hiring of Chinese immigrants, organizers led 2000 men through a demonstration. One man, known only as Pickett, stood up and admonished Crocker for the spite fence, telling him it would be torn down by Thanksgiving or the WPC would do it for him. But when WPC leader Denis Kearney was arrested on another site for inciting a riot, he told the press that his group had no reason to target Crocker or his fence.

If Yung harbored any hope that some vigilante justice would resolve the situation, it never came to pass. He and his family threw in the towel and moved out—but they still refused to sell the land to Crocker.

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A look at the dark corner created by the spite fence. Photo from The Strand.

* * *

Crocker may have thought the feud would end
with Yung’s death in 1880. It didn’t.

His widow, Rosina, continued to rebuff offers to sell the now-vacant land, which was slowly becoming a place for empty cans and other garbage. After Crocker passed away in 1888, his heirs were just as unsuccessful in persuading Rosina to let the land go. In 1895, she tried to appeal to the city's Street Committee, arguing that the fence was a nuisance and rendered her property worthless.

The city agreed, but their legal counsel didn’t: There was no justification for having the Crockers remove the fence, which had been cut down to 25 feet after strong winds had repeatedly threatened to topple it over. (In or around 1956, California would put a law on the books prohibiting the construction of fences meant for the express purpose of irritating neighbors and/or obstructing their views. Most states cap the height of a fence at 6 feet for similar reasons.)

When Rosina died in 1902, the rivalry appeared to die with her. Her four daughters finally gave in to Crocker's descendants in 1904, selling the land—said to be worth $80,000—for an undisclosed sum. With no more neighbors to spite, the fence was torn down in 1905.

In retrospect, the Yung/Crocker feud would ultimately prove pointless. In 1906, an earthquake and related fire swept through San Francisco, gutting the Crocker mansion and neighboring buildings. Rather than rebuild, the family decided to donate the block to charity.

In a strange twist, the place where Crocker had once built a monument to spite and malice became a home for compassion and warmth. In donating the site, the Crockers opened an opportunity to erect Grace Cathedral, an Episcopalian place of worship.
Aug 17th, 2022, 10:48 pm
Aug 18th, 2022, 12:29 am
Island is Wonderland for Penguins Once Again After Dog Helps Eradicate 300,000 Invasive Rabbits

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A UNESCO Natural Heritage Site has been saved from a rabbit and rat rampage, and 8 years after being declared free of invasives, the island is looking like its old self again.

A mere speck in the vast waters that separate Australia from Antarctica, Macquarie Island was listed by UNESCO in 1997, as there was simply nowhere else on earth like it.

At approximately 21 miles long and 3.4 miles wide at its broadest point, the island is the only place in the world where rocks from the earth’s mantle are actively exposed above sea level.

Macquarie Island’s birdlife is also extraordinary, and the breeding populations of penguins (including the endemic royal penguin), albatrosses, petrels and prions are recognized as one of the greatest concentrations of seabirds in the world.

However just like every other island on Earth, sailors during the 1800s brought cats, rats, mice, and rabbits ashore which decimated the head-high endemic vegetation and insect populations, causing knock-on effects that seriously threatened to turn the island into a barren rock.

Melissa Houghton was brought ashore as a dog handler with her black lab “Wags” as part of a AU$24.6 million effort by Tasmania and Australia to eradicate the invasive mammals from the island launched in 2007.

By Houghton’s arrival the island had already eliminated the feral cats, and seen decreased rodent populations thanks to poison bait drops during previous consecutive winters. Fewer numbers both of rodents and seabirds found on the island during winter made it an ideal time to drop the poison bait, which would also be a welcomed “food” source for the rodents during the lean times.

By 2011 hunters with teams dogs came in to work on the much-diminished populations, but even with the success, Houghton told the Guardian that beyond the stony beaches packed with penguins and elephant seals, the land had been decimated—undermined by constant rabbit borrowing, while the “all-you-can-eat buffet” of the native herbaceous tussock was trimmed down so far that slime and lichen took hold and sloughed the limited soil down steep hills into the sea.

“You’d have slime and lichen and landslips where albatrosses were trying to raise chicks and survive,” Houghton said. “I couldn’t even envision what the island was meant to look like.”

She and Wags had the honor of locating the very last rodent—an adult female rabbit and her young, in 2014, and since then the island has rebounded spectacularly.

Native orchids and other plants found nowhere else are growing everywhere. The leafy tussock which tastes like celery is now over your head, and the numbers of insects are now very high. Most of the birds that nest there are returning, and their poo is building nutrients and mass in the soil again. No rodent has been seen since 2014.

Island eradication is one of the best-performing conservation strategies employed worldwide by humans, and many islands, from Macquarie, to the Galapagos, are now free from introduced European pests.

Indeed, Macquarie is just one of 181 islands that have since 2000 eradicated over 800 invasive species.

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Aug 18th, 2022, 12:29 am

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Aug 18th, 2022, 8:46 am
PREHISTORIC PEOPLE USED CRYSTALS TO MARK BURIAL SITES

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Early Neolithic people used rock crystals to mark burial sites, according to new study.
Archaeologists from the University of Manchester, in collaboration with the University of Cardiff and Herefordshire County Council, have discovered rock crystals during excavations at Dorstone Hill in Herefordshire, England.

The site is a unique complex consisting of timber halls, burial mounds, and enclosures that date from the early Neolithic period 6,000 years ago.

The rock crystals found at Dorstone Hill are a rare type of transparent quartz which forms in large hexagonal gems. They have been knapped and were intentionally deposited within the burial mounds. Experts believe that the crystal material was placed at the site over many generations, potentially for up to 300 years.

There are very few places in the British Isles where these crystals are found in such a high level of purity, the closest being Snowdonia in North Wales and St David’s Head in Southwest Wales – this means that the prehistoric people living around Dorstone Hill must have carried the material across large distances to reach the site.

Evidence of rock crystals are found on a handful of prehistoric sites across the UK, but little investigation has been conducted to determine their purpose or significance. The team speculates that the material was used to demonstrate local identities and their connections with places around the British Isles and to mark the burial site.

Lead researcher Dr Nick Overton said: “It was highly exciting to find the crystal because it is exceptionally rare – in a time before glass, these pieces of perfectly transparent solid material must have been really distinctive.”

“The crystals would have looked very unusual in comparison to other stones they used, and are extremely distinctive as they emit light when hit or rubbed together and produce small patches of rainbow – we argue that their use would have created memorable moments that brought individuals together, forged local identities and connected the living with the dead whose remains they were deposited with,” added Dr Overton.
Aug 18th, 2022, 8:46 am
Aug 18th, 2022, 1:53 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
THURSDAY AUGUST 18

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
Aug 18th, 2022, 1:53 pm

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Aug 18th, 2022, 2:06 pm
"You Wouldn't Steal A Movie" Advert May Have Led To More People Stealing Movies

An infamous early 2000s anti-piracy campaign may have actually increased piracy, a new study has claimed. If you bought and watched movies legally in 2004-2007, you will be well aware of the "You Wouldn't Steal a Car" anti-piracy campaign videos. One of the benefits of pirating movies, in fact, was you didn't have to see the irritating piracy warnings.

For the uninitiated, the advert listed a number of crimes and attempted to equate them with downloading a film, whilst also attempting to make downloading a film look as dramatic as the other listed crimes.



"You wouldn't steal a car," the ad begins. "You wouldn't steal a handbag. You wouldn't steal a television. You wouldn't steal a movie. Downloading pirated films is stealing, stealing is against the law. PIRACY. IT'S A CRIME."

The ads have been widely parodied, including in an IT Crowd episode that included the lines "You wouldn't steal a baby. You wouldn't shoot a policeman and then steal his helmet. You wouldn't go to the toilet in his helmet and then send it to the policeman's grieving widow. And then steal it again!"

Was the ad the smartest campaign out there? No. But was the ad effective at preventing what it was aiming to prevent? Also no.

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Turns out you would steal a movie. :lol:

According to the new study published in The Information Society, by lumping in stronger arguments with weaker ones, this campaign and others like it dilute their own message.

"The most striking example might be the (in)famous 'You would not steal a car' awareness video aired in cinemas and on DVDs worldwide during the 2000s," the authors wrote. "It compared downloading a movie to various forms of stealing, including reasonably relevant ones (stealing a DVD in a store) and somewhat absurd others (stealing handbags, TVs, cars), which diluted down the message."

This and other piracy messages may actually encourage people to pirate films, TV, and music. What's more, by drawing attention to the fact that a lot of people pirate films, adverts against piracy may actually be indicating that it is socially normal to do so.

"In a field experiment, Cialdini found that messages and signs directed at discouraging theft, but informing visitors of the Petrified Forest National Park, Arizona, that many visitors were stealing small pieces of petrified wood, inadvertently increased the theft rate in comparison to the control situation," the authors cite.

"Informing directly or indirectly individuals that many people pirate is counterproductive and encourages piracy by driving the targeted individuals to behave similarly."

The study also critiqued campaigns that use statistics – for example, how much piracy costs the industry – to get their point across.

"Due to human biases, it is now established, people will disproportionally help a well-identified victim more than statistical victims," the authors wrote. "In short, emphasizing statistical victims of piracy numbs – dry statistics fail to spark emotion and motivate action."

However, they also warn against using identifiable victims of piracy, given that – in this instance – that includes quite well-off movie stars.

"For instance, Indian anti-piracy videos in 2018 concluded with the slogan 'illegal downloading or streaming movies is stealing!! Stealing is against the law'. All videos starred well-known actors, whose net worth is estimated to be $22–$400 million dollars, in a country where the annual per capita income is a bit less than $2,000."

"This can offer to pirates a moral justification: they only steal the rich to 'feed the poor', a form of 'Robin Hood effect' that makes even more sense with some cultural or sport-related goods."

One example of how to counteract this, they write, would be to donate a portion of the movie's profits to charity in order to make victims more relatable, or to highlight more relatable victims of piracy than multi-millionaires.
Aug 18th, 2022, 2:06 pm

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Aug 18th, 2022, 2:08 pm
Jellyfish may be turned into crisps

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The slimy sea creatures have invaded British waters in recent times due to warm summers but scientists suggest that they could become nutritious snacks.

The jellyfish can be given an extra crunch if they are marinated in alcohol or doused in salt and vinegar.

Researcher Dr. Mathiaus Clausen and a team from the University of Southern Denmark are experimenting with a number of flavour options.

He said: "It's not an unfamiliar taste - it's a bit like pork scratchings."

A Food of the Future report conducted by the British supermarket Sainsbury's also suggests that jellyfish will become a common snack in the years ahead.

The report confirmed: "Recent research has found jellyfish to be full on nutrients and vitamins.

"They are typically regarded as a last resort food source, but research is triggering a rethink."
Aug 18th, 2022, 2:08 pm

Twitter: Fatima99@fatima99_mobi
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Aug 18th, 2022, 2:47 pm
‘Angry minion’ with no anus not related to humans after all, scientists conclude
New research rules out theory that 535m-year-old Saccorhytus coronarius fossil is our earliest known

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One less relative to be embarrassed about – scientists have ruled out the possibility that a 535m-year-old microscopic fossil that looks like an “angry minion” is our earliest known ancestor.

Previous research had suggested that Saccorhytus coronarius, a tiny sack-like creature, was an early member of a large group of animals called the deuterostomes, which vertebrates – including humans – belong to.

Now researchers say they are confident that Saccorhytus is not a deuterostome, but part of the same evolutionary group as arthropods, which includes insects and crustaceans.

“The paper suggested that Saccorhytus was an early member of our own evolutionary lineage, a group of animals known as the deuterostomes. But we had specimens that were better preserved, so we knew immediately that the authors had got it flat-out wrong,” said Philip Donoghue, a professor at the University of Bristol and co-author of the latest study published in Nature.

The team recently collected hundreds of additional specimens, which they used to create 3D digital models of the creature and that revealed microscopic features in more detail.

“Saccorhytus is only about a millimetre in size and looks like a tiny wrinkly ball with a bunch of spines and a mouth with rings of teeth around it,” said Donoghue. “I like to describe it as an angry minion.”

The discovery was made when the team realised that the spines and holes around the fossil’s mouth were not respiratory organs, which is what misled the previous researchers.

“The previous conclusion was based largely on the fact that Saccorhytus fossils have a series of holes around their mouth, which they interpreted as primitive gills, a feature of deuterostomes. But we now know that these holes are simply where teeth have broken away,” said Donoghue. “Our analysis suggests that Saccorhytus is actually a member of the group that arthropods and their relatives are part of, called the ecdysozoans, although we can’t say for sure exactly where it fits in.”

Whereas deuterostome embryos develop an anus followed by a second hole that becomes the mouth, Saccorhytus only has one opening, which serves as both.

“Saccorhytus does not have an anus, only a mouth-like structure where it would have happily let anything it had eaten back out again,” said Donoghue.

The search for our earliest ancestor continues, Donoghue said. “Our understanding of the deuterostome lineage is in an absolute mess. We are working our way through early fossils to gain a better understanding of our evolution,” he added.

The authors of the earlier study have been contacted for comment.
https://www.theguardian.com/science/202 ... 20ancestor.
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"Angry minion with no anus"? Wow, that could pass for a NY Post headline. C'mon Guardian, keep it classy - Gov
Aug 18th, 2022, 2:47 pm

I dumped Twitter - tune in, turn on, on Discord!
https://discord.gg/As9DZkGXUM
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Aug 18th, 2022, 4:59 pm
Bear cubs struggle to climb into backyard hammock in Connecticut

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A man visiting family in Connecticut captured video of a family of bears that spent some time lounging on patio furniture before struggling to get into a hammock.

Justin Mathews said he was having coffee at the kitchen table while visiting family in Avon when he spotted the mother bear and two cubs in the back yard.

"It was just interesting to see them play from a distance," Mathews told CT Insider. "It's cool to see them enjoying themselves."

The video captured by Mathews shows the bear family lounging on some patio furniture, with the mother rocking on a porch swing, before the cubs wander off to struggle with getting into the hammock.
Aug 18th, 2022, 4:59 pm

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Believe me, you are someone's crush. Yes, you are!
Online
Aug 18th, 2022, 5:51 pm
Penn. Woman Who Almost Became Nun Celebrates Birth of 100th Great-Grandchild Before 100th Birthday



A Pennsylvania woman is marking two major milestones in just a matter of months.

Marguerite Koller, of Blue Bell, recently celebrated the birth of her 100th great-grandchild, Koller William, according to NBC Philadelphia. The 99-year-old got a chance to meet the baby boy shortly before her 100th birthday.

"I'm just thinking about how lucky I am," she said while holding her newest great-grandkid, who is named after her and her late husband, William.

Marguerite has credited William with convincing her to ditch plans to become a nun.

"I actually applied when I was a junior in high school but he talked me out of it," she told ABC station WPVI-TV in 2015.

Marguerite is the mother of 11 children and has 56 grandchildren, leading to her now-100 great-grandchildren, NBC Philadelphia reported.

Originally, the new baby was supposed to be her 99th great-grandchild, but the little one claimed the special title after being born more than a week after his predicted due date.

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Christine Balster, Marguerite's granddaughter and mother of the 100th great-grandchild, said she and her husband Patrick wanted to honor both of her grandparents with their son's name.

"My husband liked the name Kole, and it felt very natural to name him Koller and William as the middle name," she told NBC Philadelphia.

William died in 2008, according to the 2015 report from WPVI-TV.

Baby Koller now joins multiple generations descending from his great-grandmother Marguerite, whom Christine described as a "lovely, sweet [and] strong lady."

The new mom also praised the "amazing legacy" her grandmother has built.

In WPVI-TV's 2015 report, Marguerite's family described the matriarch as "an inspiration."

"And to be the age she is and still going about it every day," said Greg Stokes, Koller's grandson, "it's unbelievable."

*NOTE: My paternal grandparents have 9 children, 43 grandchildren and over 150 great-grandchildren. Unfortunately, they did not live to be 100 years old.
Aug 18th, 2022, 5:51 pm

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Aug 18th, 2022, 11:46 pm
Florida woman with world's longest locks grows hair to 110 feet

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The Florida woman who holds the Guinness World Record for longest locks said her tendrils of hair have now reached a length of 110 feet.

Asha Mandela, 60, was first awarded the record for longest locks (locs) in 2009, when her locks were measured at 19 feet and 6.5 inches, and the record-holder said her hair has now reached a length of 110 feet.

Mandela, who lives in Clermont, said she first started growing her locks when she moved to the United States from Trinidad and Tobago more than 40 years ago.

"I don't like the term dreadlocks because I don't think there's anything dread about my locks," Mandela told Guinness World Records. "I refer to my own hair as my royal crown of locs or my cobra."

https://www.upi.com/Odd_News/2022/08/17 ... 660753063/
Aug 18th, 2022, 11:46 pm
Aug 19th, 2022, 2:38 am
Toddler Was Chasing Bubbles When He Helped Find 82-Year-Old Woman Who Had Been Missing for Days

"Angels come in all shapes and sizes," Nina Lipscomb's daughter said of Ethan Moore

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While playing in his backyard, a Georgia toddler saw something in the woods. It ended up leading his family to a missing woman.

Nina Lipscomb, an 82-year-old woman with early stage Alzheimer's Disease, was reported missing on Aug. 9, according to FOX station WAGA-TV.

Son Thomas Lipscomb told the outlet that she was in town for an annual visit with her family, and that the family didn't realize she had left her niece's home until she had wandered too far for them to see.

Following a multi-day search by authorities and concerned community members, Nina was finally found.

Brittany Moore and her son Ethan, 1½, were playing with bubbles on Friday when some drifted towards their fence, the mom told CBS affiliate WGCL-TV. As he chased them, Moore said that she noticed something in the nearby woods catching her son's eyes.

"Feet," she recalled her son telling her.

When first responders arrived, they were able to determine that the person in the woods was Nina, who was alive but disoriented, WGCL-TV reported.

The following day, the Coweta County Sheriff's Office announced that the 82-year-old, who was "conscious and alert," had been "transported to the hospital for evaluation."

After being released from the hospital, Nina got a chance to meet Ethan, whom her family has credited with saving her life.

"We pulled out every resource we thought we needed," Nina's daughter, Karen Lipscomb, told WGLC-TV, adding that at the end of the day, "it was a little boy" who saved the day.

In a social media post, Karen also praised the little boy for helping bring her mother back home.

"Angels come in all shapes and sizes," Karen wrote.

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Aug 19th, 2022, 2:38 am

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Aug 19th, 2022, 4:07 am
Is Danish king who gave name to Bluetooth buried in Poland?
By MONIKA SCISLOWSKA

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WIEJKOWO, Poland (AP) — More than 1,000 years after his death in what is now Poland, a European king whose nickname lives on through wireless technology is at the center of an archaeological dispute.

Chronicles from the Middle Ages say King Harald “Bluetooth” Gormsson of Denmark acquired his nickname courtesy of a tooth, probably dead, that looked bluish. One chronicle from the time also says the Viking king was buried in Roskilde, in Denmark, in the late 10th century.

But a Swedish archaeologist and a Polish researcher recently claimed in separate publications that they have pinpointed his most probable burial site in the village of Wiejkowo, in an area of northwestern Poland that had ties to the Vikings in Harald’s times.

Marek Kryda, author of the book “Viking Poland,” told The Associated Press that a “pagan mound” which he claims he has located beneath Wiejkowo’s 19th-century Roman Catholic church probably holds the king’s remains. Kryda said geological satellite images available on a Polish government portal revealed a rotund shape that looked like a Viking burial mound.

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But Swedish archaeologist Sven Rosborn, says Kryda is wrong because Harald, who converted from paganism to Christianity and founded churches in the area, must have received an appropriate grave somewhere in the churchyard. Wiejkowo’s Church of The Immaculate Conception of the Blessed Virgin Mary stands atop a small round knoll.

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Historians at the Danish National Museum in Copenhagen say they are familiar with the “suggestion” that Wiejkowo is Harald’s burial place.

Rosborn detailed his research in the 2021 book ”The Viking King’s Golden Treasure” and Kryda challenged some of the Swede’s findings in his own book published this year.

Harald, who died in 985, probably in Jomsborg — which is believed to be the Polish town of Wolin now — was one of the last Viking kings to rule over what is now Denmark, northern Germany, and parts of Sweden and Norway. He spread Christianity in his kingdom.

Swedish telecommunications company Ericsson named its Bluetooth wireless link technology after the king, reflecting how he united much of Scandinavia during his lifetime. The logo for the technology is designed from the Scandinavian runic letters for the king’s initials, HB.

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Rosborn, the former director of Sweden’s Malmo City Museum, was spurred on his quest in 2014 when an 11-year-old girl sought his opinion about a small, soiled coin-like object with old-looking text that had been in her family’s possession for decades.

Experts have determined that the cast gold disc that sparked Maja Sielski’s curiosity dated from the 10th century. The Latin inscription on what is now known as the “Curmsun disc” says: “Harald Gormsson (Curmsun in Latin) king of Danes, Scania, Jomsborg, town Aldinburg.”

Sielski’s family, who moved to Sweden from Poland in 1986, said the disc came from a trove found in 1841 in a tomb underneath the Wiejkowo church, which replaced a medieval chapel.

The Sielski family came into the possession of the disc, along with the Wiejkowo parish archives that contained medieval parchment chronicles in Latin, in 1945 as the former German area was becoming part of Poland as a result of World War II.

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A family member who knew Latin understood the value of the chronicles — which dated as far back as the 10th century — and translated some of them into Polish. They mention Harald, another fact linking the Wiejkowo church to him.

The nearby Baltic Sea island and town of Wolin cultivates the region’s Viking history: it has a runic stone in honor of Harald Bluetooth and holds annual festivals of Slavs and Vikings.

Kryda says the Curmsun disc is “phenomenal” with its meaningful inscription and insists that it would be worth it to examine Wiejkowo as Harald’s burial place, but there are no current plans for any excavations.
Aug 19th, 2022, 4:07 am

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

Robert Frost

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Aug 19th, 2022, 11:24 am
Pomeranian chases bear through Colorado neighborhood
Aug. 18, 2022 / 5:15 PM*



Aug. 18 (UPI) -- A Colorado woman's home security camera captured video of the moment a that black bear wandering through her neighborhood was chased off by a neighbor's small dog.

The Castle Rock resident said her Wyze security camera captured video of the bear about 2:30 a.m. Wednesday. The footage shows the bear fleeing past the camera owner's home.

Moments later, the cause of the bear's distress is revealed: a Pomeranian puppy chasing after the bruin.

The homeowner said the dog belongs to her neighbor.

Colorado Parks and Wildlife warned residents that bears in the state are becoming more active as they prepare for hybernation.

Yippee little things, aren't they? :D :lol:
Aug 19th, 2022, 11:24 am
Aug 19th, 2022, 2:05 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
FRIDAY AUGUST 19

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
Aug 19th, 2022, 2:05 pm

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Aug 19th, 2022, 2:13 pm
Kristin Chenoweth's bleeped 'Celebrity Family Feud' answer stuns Steve Harvey

Kristin Chenoweth managed to leave host Steve Harvey speechless after she got "Wicked" on a recent episode of "Celebrity Family Feud."

The singer and actress, who played Glinda the Good Witch in the Broadway production of "Wicked," stunned Harvey with her answer to the question, "After the lips, what is your favorite part of a man to kiss?"
Chenoweth was playing opposite fellow actress Kathy Najimy when the now-viral moment happened.

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Kathy Najimy, Steve Harvey and Kristin Chenoweth in an episode of "Celebrity Family Feud."

As seen in a clip posted by the popular game show on YouTube, Chenoweth's answer is bleeped, but the caption on the video's post reads,"Kristin Chenoweth's answer rhymes with HEINOUS!"

After her answer Harvey paused a moment, seemingly surprised.



"I'm sorry," she said. "I'm a good Christian girl, forgive me."

Her answer was not on the board, which allowed Najimy to score with her answer of "cheek."

"You stay right over there young lady," Harvey said as Chenoweth returned to her team's side. "Nicest woman I've ever met."

"Welcome to Sunday night TV folks," he adlibbed.
Aug 19th, 2022, 2:13 pm

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