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Terror-Alert.com ITN News » Home » Top Stories Man tries to snatch necklace Football juggler sets record Iggy Azalea gives music advice Rat scares train passengers Spider-Man stars talk spiders Brazilian superfan Evans: MP David Davis reacts MH370 searcher 'confident' DPP defends Evans prosecution Co-op report £1.3bn loss Kate thrashes Wills in boat race Parrot scares off attacker Grandma rides rollercoaster Kate and Will unveil royal portrait PM hints at Evans return Evans cleared of sex offences Wenger on FA Cup clash Yvette Cooper: Immigration Nicky Jacobs found not guilty Woman punched by burglars The Vamps talk new album BGT girls v boys judge rivalry Kate meets crowds in Blenheim 'See-through' car technology Anti-flu drug 'should' be reviewed Alesha on being a stricter judge Prince William sits in a plane Amanda on this year's acts BGT judges pay tribute to Peaches

Newscentre - Media Monitoring Services NBC News - Breaking News & Top Stories - Latest World, US & Local News D'étranges créatures marines bousculent la vision de l'évolution › Biologie Le système nerveux serait apparu à deux reprises au cours de l'évolution de façon totalement indépendante, suggère une étude menée sur le génome des cténophores, une créature marine d'aspect translucide. Crédits : Université de Berkeley L'analyse du génome des cténophores, des créatures marines d'aspect translucide, suggère que leur système nerveux est apparu totalement indépendamment de celui des autres êtres vivants, et ce sous une forme très différente. Les cténophores font probablement partie des animaux les plus étranges découverts à ce jour : ces animaux marins translucides connus pour diffracter la lumière en de magnifiques irisations colorées, dotés d'incroyables capacités de régénération (même si la moitié de l'organisme est détruit, la partie restante peut reformer un individu complet), comptent aujourd'hui quelques 150 espèces différentes, présentes dans tous les océans du monde. Si tel est bien le cas, alors la nouvelle a de quoi surprendre. Mais ce n'est pas tout.

mmon Ground News Service « LiveNews.co.nz Latest Remembering Mandela Analysis By: Common Ground News Service: Headline: Remembering Mandela Washington, DC As we collectively mourn Nelson Mandelas passing, it is fitting to reflect on his life, and celebrate his greatness as a leader, and a man. Read More → MENA youth refuse to step down despite setbacks Analysis By: Common Ground News Service: Headline: MENA youth refuse to step down despite setbacks Beirut The glow of the Arab Spring wore off in the media a while ago. Read More → An Online Pledge That Might Actually Change the World Analysis By: Common Ground News Service: Headline: An Online Pledge That Might Actually Change the World Washington, DC – Genocide, school shootings, rape… it’s easy to express outrage after the fact. Read More → Creating truly shared cities in Israel Analysis By: Common Ground News Service: Headline: Creating truly shared cities in Israel London Earlier this year, I went on a UK Task Force trip to learn about the mixed cities of Jaffa, Lod and Haifa.

Tech titans tell Senate to go big on NSA overhaul Facebook, Google, Microsoft and other top technology companies are warning the Senate not to follow the House’s lead with a compromised plan to reform the National Security Agency. A coalition of nine major companies is planning to publish an open letter calling for the Senate to limit the NSA’s powers on Thursday, the one-year anniversary of Edward Snowden’s first revelations about the spy agency. The same day, a top trade group head will warn the Senate Intelligence Committee that the spy agency’s activities could lead to “seriously damaging long-term implications” for the global economy. Together, the efforts amount to a concerted push to pressure the Senate to rein in surveillance, after the House passed a bill that many reformers thought was too weak. The tech coalition is made up of Google, Facebook, AOL, Microsoft, Apple, Twitter, Yahoo, Dropbox and LinkedIn.

Bill Cosby's Sweats Stand Out in Sea of Suits at Lewis Katz's Memorial Bill Cosby stuck out amid the sea of dark suits Wednesday at his friend and Philadelphia Inquirer co-owner Lewis Katz's funeral, donning a pair of red Temple University sweatpants and a school T-shirt. The 72-year-old Katz died Saturday in a plane crash. He was Cosby's classmate at Temple. The Philadelphia school hosted ex-President Bill Clinton and other dignitaries for Wednesday's remembrance, The Associated Press reported. Urgent: Do You Approve Or Disapprove of President Obama's Job Performance? At one point during the memorial, Cosby, 76, nearly fell off the edge of the stage, later explaining he couldn't find the stairs. He also joked about having to go to the bathroom during the many long tributes, but he turned serious when he spoke of Katz's legacy. Cosby said: "You don't have to have big money. Urgent: Assess Your Heart Attack Risk in Minutes. Related Stories: © 2014 Newsmax.

Why Big Data Can’t Buy You Happiness Does a by-the-numbers advice column really give advice? Americans, on average, like to think of themselves as average. As the wise C.J. Cregg put it on The West Wing: “This may come as a shock to you, but 80 percent of the people in this country would use the word ‘average’ to describe themselves. They do not find the term deprecating. Now Nate Silver’s new endeavor, FiveThirtyEight.com, has taken the American appetite for normalcy and spun an advice column out of it: in response to bintel brief–type letters presenting quandaries, readers receive responses based, as is everything at FiveThirtyEight, on data. So, Micah, it turns out that living alone at your age is a rarity in America. What does knowing that he’s statistically “a little less abnormal” tell Cohen? Averages can be contradictory and misleading. Exhausted yet? It is forever tempting to measure ourselves against the mean. Chalabi takes Cohen’s question at face value.

Iraq in Crisis: Militant Advance Sparks Mass Displacement as "Failed" U.S. Experiment Disintegrates This is a rush transcript. Copy may not be in its final form. JUAN GONZÁLEZ: Iraq is on the brink of disintegration. Sunni Islamist rebels have seized control of Mosul, Iraq’s second-largest city, as well as Tikrit, Saddam Hussein’s hometown, and Dhuluiya which is just 55 miles northwest of the capital of Baghdad. AMY GOODMAN: The rebel advance has also caused a humanitarian catastrophe. MOSUL REFUGEE: [translated] We were sitting in the house, but we heard clashes and sounds of explosions. JUAN GONZÁLEZ: Mosul fell in part because U.S. Wednesday was a deadly day in Baghdad, as well. AMY GOODMAN: Meanwhile, on Capitol Hill, the Senate Foreign Relations Committee met to question President Obama’s nominee for the next ambassador to Iraq Wednesday, but the senators did not ask the nominee or the current ambassador to Iraq a single direct question about the current crisis. To talk more about Iraq, we’re joined by two guests. Let’s go first to South Carolina to Mohammed al Dulaimy. [break]

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