India’s moon rover completes its walk, scientists analyzing data looking for signs of frozen water.

Published Tue, 19 Nov 2024 08:41:54 GMT

India’s moon rover completes its walk, scientists analyzing data looking for signs of frozen water. NEW DELHI (AP) — India’s moon rover has completed its walk on the lunar surface and been put into sleep mode less than two weeks after its historic landing near the lunar south pole, India’s space mission said.“The rover completes its assignments. It is now safely parked and set into sleep mode,” with daylight on that part of the moon coming to an end, the Indian Space Research Organization said in a statement late Saturday.The rover’s payloads are turned off and the data it collected has been transmitted to the Earth via the lander, the statement said.The Chandrayaan-3 lander and rover were expected to operate only for one lunar day, which is equal to 14 days on Earth.“Currently, the battery is fully charged. The solar panel is oriented to receive the light at the next sunrise expected on September 22, 2023. The receiver is kept on. Hoping for a successful awakening for another set of assignments!” the statement said.There was no word on the outcome of the rover s...

Lotto 649 winning numbers for Saturday, Sept. 2, 2023

Published Tue, 19 Nov 2024 08:41:54 GMT

Lotto 649 winning numbers for Saturday, Sept. 2, 2023 TORONTO — The winning numbers in Saturday’s Lotto 649 draw for an estimated $5 million: 12, 13, 30, 33, 35 & 43.Bonus: 17The winning number for the guaranteed $1 million: 13937616-01In the event of any discrepancy between this list and the official winning numbers, the latter shall prevail. The Canadian Press

Founding father Gen. Anthony Wayne’s legacy is getting a second look at Ohio’s Wayne National Forest

Published Tue, 19 Nov 2024 08:41:54 GMT

Founding father Gen. Anthony Wayne’s legacy is getting a second look at Ohio’s Wayne National Forest NELSONVILLE, Ohio (AP) — Some 40 Native American tribes have ancestral ties to Wayne National Forest, a quarter-million acres spread across portions of Appalachian southeastern Ohio. Their citizens have never stopped helping the U.S. Forest Service manage this expanse of forested hills, hollows, streams and lakes — even as the name recalls a violent past. Now, a vigorous debate is underway over a Forest Service proposal to replace the name of Gen. Anthony Wayne, a founding father who Americans of an earlier era celebrated as an “Indian fighter,” with something more neutral: Buckeye National Forest, after the state tree. Forest Manager Lee Stewart said tribes had been asking for a name change for decades, but their request was formalized last year as part of a sweeping review of derogatory place names undertaken by the Biden administration. Since 2021, the names of about 650 places and geographic features across the country have been renamed, with involvement by the same federa...

Aspiring Taiwan presidential candidate Terry Gou resigns from board of Apple supplier Foxconn

Published Tue, 19 Nov 2024 08:41:54 GMT

Aspiring Taiwan presidential candidate Terry Gou resigns from board of Apple supplier Foxconn BEIJING (AP) — Aspiring Taiwanese independent presidential candidate Terry Gou has resigned from the board of Foxconn, the Apple supplier he founded nearly a half-century ago. The company, officially registered as Hon Hai Precision Industry Co., Ltd., issued a news release late Saturday saying Gou, its former chair, had resigned for personal reasons.It wasn’t clear what, if any, immediate effect Gou’s decision would have on the operations of Foxconn, ranked 20th in the 2023 Fortune Global 500 and considered one of the world’s largest technology companies. It is headquartered in Taiwan, but does the vast majority of its manufacturing in China, where it employs hundreds of thousands making iPhones in vast factory-dormitory complexes that have sometimes seen frictions between workers and management over employment conditions.Guo announced Aug. 28 he would run as an independent candidate in Taiwan’s presidential election, ending months of speculation.At a news conference, Go...

AI project imagines adult faces of children who disappeared during Argentina’s military dictatorship

Published Tue, 19 Nov 2024 08:41:54 GMT

AI project imagines adult faces of children who disappeared during Argentina’s military dictatorship BUENOS AIRES, Argentina (AP) — If a baby was taken from their parents four decades ago during Argentina’s military dictatorship, what would that person look like today?Argentine publicist Santiago Barros has been trying to answer that question using artificial intelligence to create images of what the children of parents who disappeared during the dictatorship might look like as adults.Almost every day, Barros uploads these images to an Instagram account called iabuelas, which is a portmanteau in Spanish for artificial intelligence, or IA, and grandmother, or abuela — taken from the well-known activist group Grandmothers of Plaza de Mayo that searches for missing children.“We have seen the photos of most of the disappeared, but we don’t have photos of their children, of those children who were stolen,” Barros told The Associated Press. “It struck me that these people did not have a face.”During Argentina’s bloody dictatorship from 1976 to 1983, military offic...

Tribe getting piece of Minnesota back more than a century after ancestors died there

Published Tue, 19 Nov 2024 08:41:54 GMT

Tribe getting piece of Minnesota back more than a century after ancestors died there GRANITE FALLS, Minn. (AP) — Golden prairies and winding rivers of a Minnesota state park also hold the secret burial sites of Dakota people who died as the United States failed to fulfill treaties with Native Americans more than a century ago. Now their descendants are getting the land back.The state is taking the rare step of transferring the park with a fraught history back to a Dakota tribe, trying to make amends for events that led to a war and the largest mass hanging in U.S. history.“It’s a place of holocaust. Our people starved to death there,” said Kevin Jensvold, chairman of the Upper Sioux Community, a small tribe with about 550 members just outside the park.The Upper Sioux Agency State Park in southwestern Minnesota spans a little more than 2 square miles (about 5 square kilometers) and includes the ruins of a federal complex where officers withheld supplies from Dakota people, leading to starvation and deaths.Decades of tension exploded into the U.S.-Dakota War of 1862 b...

Students criticize the University of North Carolina’s response to an active shooter emergency

Published Tue, 19 Nov 2024 08:41:54 GMT

Students criticize the University of North Carolina’s response to an active shooter emergency CHAPEL HILL, N.C. (AP) — As sirens blared across the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and cell phones lit up with alerts of an active shooter, Micah Baldonado cried quietly at his desk while his teacher proceeded with the lecture.“I know there’s no right way to react, but I just lost it,” he said. “I couldn’t hold back tears. My teacher actually kept teaching for maybe 30 minutes even after receiving alerts of an active shooter.”The senior from Charlotte said rumors spread quickly across campus during a three-hour lockdown and police manhunt on Aug. 28 resulting in the arrest of a UNC graduate student. Tailei Qi, 34, is being held without bond on charges of first-degree murder and having a gun on educational property in connection with the shooting death of associate professor Zijie Yan inside a science building.Baldonado spent hours listening to the police scanner and reading news reports from inside his locked classroom during what he referred to as an infor...

Berlin Wall relic gets a ‘second life’ on US-Mexico border as Biden adds barriers

Published Tue, 19 Nov 2024 08:41:54 GMT

Berlin Wall relic gets a ‘second life’ on US-Mexico border as Biden adds barriers TIJUANA, Mexico (AP) — As the U.S. government built its latest stretch of border wall, Mexico made a statement of its own by laying remains of the Berlin Wall a few steps away. The 3-ton pockmarked, gray concrete slab sits between a bullring, a lighthouse and the border wall, which extends into the Pacific Ocean.“May this be a lesson to build a society that knocks down walls and builds bridges,” reads the inscription below the towering Cold War relic, attributed to Tijuana Mayor Montserrat Caballero and titled, “A World Without Walls.”For Caballero, like many of Tijuana’s 2 million residents, the U.S. wall is personal and political, a part of the city’s fabric and a fact of life. She considers herself a migrant, having moved from the southern Mexico city of Oaxaca when she was 2 with her mother, who fled “the vicious cycle of poverty, physical abuse and illiteracy.”The installation opened Aug. 13 at a ceremony with Caballero and Marcelo Ebrard, Mexico’s former fore...

Fatal police shooting of pregnant Ohio woman raises concerns over firing at moving vehicles

Published Tue, 19 Nov 2024 08:41:54 GMT

Fatal police shooting of pregnant Ohio woman raises concerns over firing at moving vehicles Body camera video of the fatal police shooting of Ta’Kiya Young, a 21-year-old pregnant mother in a suburb of Columbus, Ohio, has raised questions about how an allegation of shoplifting led to a bullet being fired through her windshield. It was unclear Saturday whether the Blendon Township Police Department has adopted a use-of-force continuum policy, which would outline measures that must be exhausted before lethal force can be used.The video of the Aug. 24 shooting, released Friday, shows Young in her car in a parking space as a police officer orders her to exit the vehicle. A second officer is seen drawing his firearm and stepping in front of the car, despite a department policy advising officers to get out of the way of an approaching vehicle instead of firing their weapon. “Are you going to shoot me?” Young asks, seconds before she turns the steering wheel to the right and the car moves toward the second officer. The officer fires through the windshield and Young’s sedan ...

Still reeling from flooding, some in Vermont say something better must come out of losing everything

Published Tue, 19 Nov 2024 08:41:54 GMT

Still reeling from flooding, some in Vermont say something better must come out of losing everything BERLIN, Vt. (AP) — Seven weeks after catastrophic flooding in Vermont destroyed their mobile home, Sara Morris and her family don’t yet know what they will do for housing long-term. She and her husband, their three kids and his mother have been staying with Morris’ mother since the flooding mangled their home, boring a hole through the side and leaving it tilted in layers of mud. With winter fast approaching, some Vermonters hit by the July flooding are still deep in the throes of flood recovery, whether finding a place to live or repairing their homes or businesses. So far, the Federal Emergency Management Agency has determined more than 2,900 homes in the state had some type of damage, based on applications and housing inspections, including 530 designated as having major damage and 14 destroyed. About 1,280 households have received rental assistance from FEMA, which may be an indication of how many people cannot currently live in their homes, according to the governor...