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tenq Clippers lose sponsorships amid Donald Sterling controversy
« le: Décembre 07, 2024, 10:21:44 am »
Stcp Drunken, naked episode gets Navy admiral fired
 Today in our Eye on Earth series, we are walking among giants ndash; the huge sequoia groves of California that draw millions of stanley cup  tourists a year. But these forests are more than photo opportunities; they are longtime warriors in the battle against climate change.In Sequoia National Park many of the trees have been alive since before the Roman Empire, which means civilization literally grew  stanley cup up around them. Scientists are now studying the impacts that civilization is having on these trees  very existence, by climbing into a cloud-hugging laboratory study the impacts of climate change.From the air, the breathtaking beauty of the Sierra Nevada covers up an ugly statistic: The Forest Service estim stanley cup ates that about 130 million trees died in the state of California during the drought which lasted from late 2010 through earlier this year.                                         Tree ecologists Anthony Ambrose and Wendy Baxter have been working throughout that drought, but they haven t been studying the pines, firs and cedars that died; they ve been analyzing the world-famous monsters that survived: the giant sequoias, the largest living creatures on Earth.                Scientists ascend into the canopies at Sequoia National Park to study how the giant trees adapt to drought.                                                      CBS News                                         They ve been living and growing in the same place, some of them, for thousands of years,  said Baxter.        Plgs ESPN suspends Bill Simmons for comments about NFL s Goodell
 COLUMBIA, S.C. -- An African-American church in South Carolina that was burned down by the Ku Klux Klan in 1995 caught fire again Tuesday night, though authorities said it was too soon to tell if arson was behind the latest b stanley cup laze, which broke out on a night of frequent storms featuring lightning. No one was believed to be inside at the time.The fire at the Mount Zion African Methodist Episcopal church in Greeleyville broke out at a time when federal authorities are investigating blazes at several other predominantly black churches in the South, but so far the fires don t appear to be related.The latest blaze broke out at about 8:30 p.m. and was extinguished by midnight, reports CBS News correspondent Mark Strassmann. When it was over, he says, there wasn t much left. As the fire raged, orange smoke filled the air above the church and spilled from its windows.                                        Greeleyville is about 50 miles north of Charleston, where a pastor and nine members of a historic black church were fatally shot on June 17 in what authorities are investigating as a hate crime.The fire comes about a yeezy  week after Mount Zion AME wa jordan s featured in a Los Angeles Times story about the long history of violence against black churches and 20 years after it was burned to the ground by the Klan, reports CBS Columbia affiliate WLTX-TV. It is the seventh Southern church to catch fire in recent weeks.        Agents from the State Law Enforcement Division were on their way to the ch