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May. 14, 2007

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BBC
Netanyahu defiant after US threat to stop weapons: Israeli leader says his country will "stand alone" and "fight with fingernails" if shipments are halted.
Where Stormy Daniels' testimony leaves the Trump trial: Experts say the star witness's answers were sometimes useful - and other times completely irrelevant.
Victims infected with Hep C after blood screening began: Lawyers tell the BBC people infected after September 1991 should be allowed to claim compensation.
Starmer to unveil plans to tackle small boats: The Labour leader will pledge to divert £75m from the Rwanda scheme to border security if he wins power.

CBC
Life of girl born on plane ends in abuse, neglect, manslaughter: A girl with dark hair wearing a black hat.

A girl whose birth on an Air Canada flight made international headlines died five years later in pain and neglect in the early, isolating months of the pandemic, an Ontario Superior courtroom heard in March.


Veteran con man arrested over 'large scale' Ontario investment fraud: A middle-aged man with glasses.

Waterloo Regional Police have charged David Villanueva with fraud, after a 14-month investigation. The veteran conman has six prior convictions, and has left a cross-Canada trail of victims.


Police found DNA lead but no match for unidentified victim of Winnipeg serial killer, trial hears: The name Buffalo Woman marks a piece of wood that holds a red dress near the Canadian Museum for Human Rights.

A shred of DNA from the cuff of a jacket is the only real clue investigators ever found in their efforts to identify the lone unknown victim of an admitted serial killer in Winnipeg, court heard during the man’s trial this week.



New York Times Science
Brazil’s National Museum Receives Massive Fossil Donation: A gift from abroad of more than 1,100 Brazilian fossils aims to step up efforts to rebuild the country’s National Museum, which suffered major fire damage in 2018.

Tuna Crabs, Neither Tuna Nor Crabs, Are Swarming Near San Diego: Divers and marine biologists are getting a window into the lives of a red crustacean most often found in the guts of other species.

Why You Can Hear the Temperature of Water: A science video maker in China couldn’t find a good explanation for why hot and cold water sound different, so he did his own research and published it.

The Ever-Resilient Pupfish Makes a Comeback in Death Valley: The spring population of the critically endangered species is at a 25-year high, a surprising rebound in a tiny desert cave.

A Cicada’s Guide to Periodical Romance: It may sound like a mosh pit out there. But to the participants, mating is a delicate, sonorous affair, fraught with potential missteps — and fungal zombies.


Visualizing Science



The oldest known human art is also the oldest known human attempt to record Nature.  This painting is 34,000 years old and was found in the Chauvet-Pont-d'Arc Cave, which is the subject of Werner Herzog’s film: Cave of Forgotten Dreams. Herzog used a 3D camera to capture how the shapes of the walls were incorporated into the paintings.



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