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Jul. 20th, 2014 08:48 amSpectacular fossils unearthed in China show detailed brain structures of a bizarre group of sea creatures that were the top predators more than half a billion years ago.
In U.S. gay marriage cases, children emerge in the limelight
“I don’t believe in Ebola,” Craig Manning’s local driver told him as he chauffeured the viral emergency specialist through Freetown, Sierra Leone, where infection rates are rising. The man came from a rural part of the country where people were already dying from the virus. He was adamant, like many others in his community, that “there is no such thing as Ebola.”
‘Dead’ girl wakes up in coffin during her own funeral
Long-Lost Photos Show What Hasn't Changed About Motherhood In 50 Years
17 Historical Reactions to Air Conditioning
The Danish archers Lars Andersen has rediscovered an old and very fast way to shoot bows.
The Next Breadbasket
Why the world's corporations are gobbling up land in the world's hungriest continent
Gov. Terry McAuliffe renewed his pitch for expanding health care to the poor Friday by touring a field hospital set up at a county fairgrounds, where people had camped out for days for the chance to see a dentist or doctor.
McAuliffe flew to the Remote Area Medical expedition in far southwest Virginia, where the line for free dental and medical care was 1,500 long by 4 a.m. Friday, when organizers started turning people away.
Brain's limits lead to unconscious choices in what we see and remember
At least 50 Palestinians were killed on Sunday by Israeli shelling in a Gaza neighborhood, where bodies were strewn in the street and thousands fled for shelter to a hospital packed with wounded, witnesses and health officials said.
Why Iran Believes the Militant Group ISIS Is an American Plot
More Western fighters joining militants in Iraq and Syria
Meet Executive Order 12333: The Reagan rule that lets the NSA spy on Americans
Washington state wildfire destroys 100 homes, hundreds evacuated
In U.S. gay marriage cases, children emerge in the limelight
“I don’t believe in Ebola,” Craig Manning’s local driver told him as he chauffeured the viral emergency specialist through Freetown, Sierra Leone, where infection rates are rising. The man came from a rural part of the country where people were already dying from the virus. He was adamant, like many others in his community, that “there is no such thing as Ebola.”
‘Dead’ girl wakes up in coffin during her own funeral
Long-Lost Photos Show What Hasn't Changed About Motherhood In 50 Years
17 Historical Reactions to Air Conditioning
The Danish archers Lars Andersen has rediscovered an old and very fast way to shoot bows.
The Next Breadbasket
Why the world's corporations are gobbling up land in the world's hungriest continent
Gov. Terry McAuliffe renewed his pitch for expanding health care to the poor Friday by touring a field hospital set up at a county fairgrounds, where people had camped out for days for the chance to see a dentist or doctor.
McAuliffe flew to the Remote Area Medical expedition in far southwest Virginia, where the line for free dental and medical care was 1,500 long by 4 a.m. Friday, when organizers started turning people away.
Brain's limits lead to unconscious choices in what we see and remember
At least 50 Palestinians were killed on Sunday by Israeli shelling in a Gaza neighborhood, where bodies were strewn in the street and thousands fled for shelter to a hospital packed with wounded, witnesses and health officials said.
Why Iran Believes the Militant Group ISIS Is an American Plot
More Western fighters joining militants in Iraq and Syria
Meet Executive Order 12333: The Reagan rule that lets the NSA spy on Americans
Washington state wildfire destroys 100 homes, hundreds evacuated