Nebraska safety Marquel Dismuke raises his arm with the football in jubilation with teammates (left to right) Lamar Jackson, Alex Davis and Collin Miller, after recovering a fumble against the Terrapins during first half action Saturday at Maryland Stadium.
COLLEGE PARK, Md. — Nebraska football writer Parker Gabriel offers his extra points from the Huskers' 54-7 win against Maryland on Saturday.
It was over when: Maryland didn't show up ready to play? More accurate, probably, would be when senior cornerback Lamar Jackson stripped Terps freshman quarterback Lance Legendre at the end of a 26-yard run, forcing a fumble that senior linebacker Mohamed Barry recovered.
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Wellington West pot shop launches recycling and food drive program - OttawaMatters.com
Legal pot can do a lot of things — entertain, excite, destress — but it’s not often that you get to do some good for someone else, someone who really needs help, just by smoking up.
Superette, the startup Westboro dispensary that has been raking in the praise (and awards) within the cannabis world, is setting out to change that by teaming up with the Ottawa Food Bank to turn recycled packaging into donated food.
“Starting in December, and throughout 2020, we will be matching every unit of cannabis packaging that is recycled and brought back to the store with a unit of non-perishable food,” the store’s founder, Mimi Lam, announced to a group of supporters, neighbours and media on Friday morning.
Robert J. Friend, Tuskegee Pilot Who Led U.F.O. Project, Is Dead at 99 - The New York Times
Remaining in the military in what became the Air Force and rising to lieutenant colonel, he directed Project Blue Book, the government's secret study of unidentified flying objects, assessing whether they posed a threat to national security or might advance scientific research. He held the post from 1958 to 1963.
When, after 20 years, the project ended in 1969, about 700 of more than 12,000 sightings had been classified as unidentified. But the study concluded that the objects posed no danger and displayed no perplexing technological attributes.
Camp Fire: Paradise survivors find ways to heal year after deadly fire
Ink Majors Body Art tattoo parlor was among the first businesses to re-open this year in Paradise. Tattooist Major Montana says he has done more than 100 tattoos memorializing the fire, including two designs incorporating Ponderosa pines, the once-ubiquitous trees that fueled the firestorm.
As he works with his clients to personalize tattoos, he has become a sort of impromptu therapist to his clients.
"Once they start explaining what they want, the story of what happened to them on that day comes out," Montana said, saying that sessions often last hours longer than it takes to finish the tattoo so he can hear their whole story.
While you're here, how about this:
The Day Two Astronauts Said They Saw a U.F.O. Wearing a Red Suit | History | Smithsonian
As a distant war was intensifying and the city of New Orleans was slowly recovering from a hurricane's devastation, ten days before Christmas 1965, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration got an early holiday present: astronauts Walter M. "Wally" Schirra Jr. and Thomas P. Stafford, aboard Gemini 6, rendezvoused in space with Gemini 7, piloted by Frank Borman and Jim Lovell.
Then, just before Stafford and Schirra were scheduled to reenter Earth's atmosphere December 16, the pair reported they had sighted some sort of U.F.O. Schirra recounted the moment when Stafford contacted Mission Control in Schirra's Space , a memoir he wrote with Richard Billings:
Police Investigate a Fireball That Fell From the Sky in Rural Oregon County - Willamette Week
Baby boomers may put 'tidal wave' of 21M homes on market -- but who will buy them?
On the weekend Sun City opened, cars were backed up for 2 miles as some 100,000 visitors waited to gawk at a village built specifically for adults over the age of 50. They found a new nine-hole golf course and a community center with 250-seat auditorium, swimming pool, shuffleboard court and lawn bowling green.
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The concept was a huge hit. The developer, Del Webb, sold about as many homes in the first year as executives had expected to sell in three. Six decades later Sun City is home to 38,000 people.
Seen something weird in the sky? Thousands in Pa. and N.J.
Stars appear to rotate around Polaris, the north star (C, top), in this time exposure, 26 January, 2006, above a view of the 4-meter telescope dome at Kitt Peak National Observatory near Tucson, Arizona. The image is composed of 114 30-second exposures of the night sky combined to make the equivalent of a nearly one hour exposure in which the earth's rotation causes the stars to appear to move across the night sky. The orange glow on the horizon is from the city of Phoenix, 100 miles away.
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