Fragments of skull believed to be Beethoven’s returned to Vienna from US for scientific analysis
Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 06:09:16 GMT
(CNN) — Fragments of a skull believed to have been that of composer Ludwig van Beethoven have been donated to a university in Austria after spending decades in the United States.The pieces of bone were donated to the Medical University of Vienna by American businessman Paul Kaufmann, who discovered them in a safety deposit box in a French bank following his mother’s death in 1990.It later emerged that the bones, which were contained in a tin faintly engraved with the word “Beethoven,” had been acquired from the estate of his mother’s great-uncle, Franz Romeo Seligmann.Seligmann, who died in 1892, had been a physician, medical historian and anthropologist in Vienna. The skull pieces, now referred to as the Seligmann fragments, came into his possession in 1863 during a reburial of Beethoven’s bones for study purposes.Over the course of his 56 years, Beethoven famously suffered from progressive hearing loss, as well as gastrointestinal problems and liver disease.In 1802, 25 years befor...Cupkin children’s cups sold on Amazon recalled over newly-detected lead levels
Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 06:09:16 GMT
NEW YORK (AP) — More than 345,000 children’s cups are being recalled due to lead levels that exceed the federal content ban, the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission said Thursday.Soojimus is recalling 8-ounce and 12-ounce models of its Cupkin Double-Walled Stainless Steel Children’s Cups — sold in various colors on Amazon and the Cupkin website from 2018 through earlier this year.Consumers in possession of the recalled Cupkin cups are urged to stop using them immediately and contact Soojimus for a full refund. No illnesses or injuries related to the recall have been reported to date.According to Cupkin, liquid in the now-recalled cups is “not exposed to lead due to the double walled construction.” The exposure to lead can occur if the cup bottoms are mistreated, the brand said.In a response to the recall on its website, Cupkin noted that it initiated the voluntary recall after receiving consumer feedback and conducting additional testing. Lead was not detected during the p...Pro-war Putin critic Igor Girkin arrested
Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 06:09:16 GMT
Igor Girkin, a former soldier-spy and critic of President Vladimir Putin’s conduct of the war against Ukraine, was arrested on Friday after the latest in a series of diatribes against the Kremlin chief appeared to go too far.Girkin, who goes by the nom de guerre Strelkov (“Shooter”), gained notoriety in 2014 when he led a band of irregular troops into Eastern Ukraine and briefly became the breakaway region’s defense minister. He was convicted in absentia of murder by a Dutch court over his role in shooting down a Malaysian Airlines passenger jet, a tragedy that cost 298 lives.The 52-year-old has since reinvented himself as an ultra-nationalist military commentator and has delivered a series of withering critiques of Russia’s war aims and strategy in Ukraine.In a statement posted to Girkin’s Telegram channel, his wife Miroslava Reginskaya said that representatives of Russia’s Investigative Committee — an anti-corruption and crime-fighting agency — had taken ...Boston police arrest North End restaurant owner who had been on the run following shooting
Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 06:09:16 GMT
The owner of a North End restaurant police had considered “armed and dangerous” was taken into custody after going on the run for nearly a week.The Boston Police Department announced that officers assigned to its Fugitive Unit arrested Patrick Mendoza on Friday morning. The owner of Monica’s Trattoria had been wanted in connection with a brazen shooting in the North End that happened the night of Wednesday, July 12.The shooting had left a bullet hole in the window of Modern Pastry on Hanover Street and led to a warrant being issued for Mendoza’s arrest on charges that included:Assault by Means of a Dangerous Weapon (Gun)Assault and Battery by Means of a Dangerous WeaponAssault and BatteryVideo from that night obtained by 7NEWS showed a man police say was Mendoza as he rode up on a bicycle and opened fire on a man. The victim could be seen running away after taking cover behind a nearby vehicle. No injuries were reported.Mendoza’s arrest came after the c...Wanted North End restaurant manager in police custody
Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 06:09:16 GMT
Patrick Mendoza is in custody, according to police.Mendoza, 54, was wanted by police for allegedly shooting at a man outside Modern Pastry last Wednesday. He faces an array of charges, including assault to murder, assault with a dangerous weapon, and multiple firearms offenses, according to the Boston Police Department.Mendoza was apprehended in Falmouth down on Cape Cod, according to a source with knowledge of the case.Police said in a statement, “On Friday, July 21, 2023, Officers assigned to the Boston Police Fugitive Unit arrested Patrick Mendoza on a warrant issued out of Boston Municipal Court for: Assault by Means of a Dangerous Weapon (Gun), Assault and Battery by Means of a Dangerous Weapon, and Assault and Battery, in relation to an incident that occurred on July 12, 2023 at 257 Hanover St., Boston.”He is expected to be arraigned in court today.A police report said a suspect identified as Mendoza fired “three shots” at a man and then fled on “...Where to eat and drink near Del Mar Racetrack this season
Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 06:09:16 GMT
SAN DIEGO -- Time to bust out your finest attire and biggest hats because horse racing season is set to begin in Del Mar Racetrack this week.Opening Day -- set for Friday, July 21 -- will feature 10 races, the Opening Day Hats Contest and "all the fanfare that makes it an unofficial San Diego holiday," said the Del Mar Thoroughbred Club. Opening Day at Del Mar Racetrack: What to know before you go Attendees can expect world-class racing on top of luxury food and drinks. From steak dinners to picnic lunches, there are options for everyone to create a memorable experience during the 2023 racing season.Here are some go-to restaurants and bars near the Del Mar Racetrack for pre-race libations, or post-race dinner celebrations after a big win.One PaseoThis urban shopping and dining hub is just a short drive from the excitement at the Del Mar Racetrack. This area is a great pre-race spot to grab a drink and a bite, or even grab last minute attire at one of many boutiques for the occasio...Fire damages building that houses office of Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul
Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 06:09:16 GMT
BOWLING GREEN, Ky. (AP) — A fire has caused heavy damage Friday morning to a building that houses the Bowling Green office of Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul as well as a local law firm.Fire crews were called to the building on State Steet around 2 a.m. Friday and found a heavy blaze that required additional units, Bowling Green Fire Department spokeswoman Katie McKee told the Daily News.Six units worked for hours to extinguish the flames, with firefighters manning aerials to get at the blaze from above. The fire caused a roof collapse and a plume of heavy gray smoke rose from the top of the building at sunrise, the newspaper reported.No injuries were reported, McKee said. The cause and origin of the fire were under investigation.Paul said in a statement that he was thankful for first responders who arrived quickly to extinguish the blaze. He said his office is working with authorities to assess damages and determine a cause and will continue to operate for constituents.“We have a very well...UN expert decries the practice of taking boys from their mothers at detention camps in Syria
Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 06:09:16 GMT
GENEVA (AP) — A U.N.-backed human rights advocate says hundreds of boys — some as young as 11 — held in detention camps run by U.S.-backed, Kurdish-led forces in northeastern Syria have been wrongly separated from their mothers on the “unproven” belief that they pose a security risk.Fionnuala Ni Aolain, an independent U.N. rapporteur on the protection of rights while countering terrorism, aired concerns Friday about lingering “mass arbitrary detention” in the infamous al-Hol camp and others like it that she saw during her trip to the region this week — billed as the first visit of its kind by an independent human rights expert.For years, human rights advocates have been calling on foreign countries — in Europe, north Africa and beyond — to repatriate their nationals from the camps housing family members of Islamic State group militants, especially children who were not involved in the atrocities carried out by the extremist group.The group rose to power amid an uprising-turned...New report points to homicide rate declines in U.S. cities after pandemic-era spike
Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 06:09:16 GMT
WASHINGTON (AP) — Homicides are declining in a cross-section of American cities, though their numbers remain higher than before the coronavirus pandemic took hold, according to a new report analyzing data from 30 U.S. cities. Homicides on average dropped 9.4% during the first half of 2023 as compared to the same period last year, the nonpartisan Council on Criminal Justice found in a report released this week.The numbers remained about 24% higher than they were in 2019, and motor vehicle thefts were up sharply in the analyzed cities. “We’re seeing a continuing decline in homicides, but most cities are not back to levels that prevailed prior to the pandemic,” said Richard Rosenfeld, a professor of criminology and criminal justice at the University of Missouri-St. Louis and co-author of the report.The report is based on crime data posed online by police departments in 37 cities of varying sizes around the country. Several of the nation’s largest cities, including New York, Los A...British balloonists’ transatlantic quest thwarted as troubles force landing in N.L.
Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 06:09:16 GMT
ST. JOHN’S, N.L. — Two ballooning Brits have abandoned their quest to fly across the Atlantic after technical issues forced them to land in Newfoundland this morning.U.K. residents Mike and Deborah Scholes lifted off from a New Brunswick field on Thursday morning in a Rozier hot air balloon, bound for the other side of the ocean.They hoped to cross the Atlantic in about six days, with the balloon’s trajectory and landing spot determined by the direction and speed of the winds.But their Facebook page says they had to land unexpectedly in central Newfoundland after just 19 hours of flight because of an unspecified technical problem.The post says it would have been unwise for them to continue their journey but adds that the “setback” has not dampened the couple’s adventurous spirits.If their mission had been successful, Deborah Scholes would have been the first woman to captain a balloon across the Atlantic and her husband the first registered blind person...Latest news
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