2018年1月31日星期三

Tom Brady's hydration method may be dangerous, nutritionist says

Tom Brady's hydration method might work for a world-class athlete, but one nutritionist warned that drinking as much water as the quarterback could kill you.

Brady, in his book "The TB 12 Method," claims that drinking more than 35 glasses of water per day will help you flush out the toxins in your body and even help you prevent sunburns.

"Drink at least one-half of your body weight in ounces of water every day," the book recommends, according to the report. "That's the minimum. Ideally, you'll drink more than that, and with added electrolytes, too."

Nutritionist Ariane Resnik told The Daily Meal on Tuesday that she would not recommend anyone drinking the amount Brady suggests.

According to The Daily Meal, taking in that much water could cause hyponatremia, which is caused when a person drinks so much water, their sodium levels drop and could cause your cells to swell. She warned that it could  lead  to a stroke.

"Increase your water intake by 2 to 4 glasses a day and you will be better hydrated, your skin may look less wrinkled, and you'll likely feel better," Resnik said. "I'd avoid trying to become a human aquarium."

Ryan Gaydos is an editor for Fox News. Follow him on Twitter @RyanGaydos.

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India budget offers free cooking gas, health plan for poor

India's finance minister has announced a federal budget with a string of populist giveaways, from free cooking gas to a health plan for the poor, in an attempt to woo voters ahead of national elections next year.

Finance Minister Arun Jaitley has also announced a sharp increase in agricultural exports to help increase prices for farmers. Exports of agricultural products have long been restricted by regulations. The government will also help in building more than 5 million affordable houses for the poor in the next financial year.

This is the last budget of Prime Minister Narendra Modi's government, which will seek a second five-year tenure in May 2019 national elections. The new government will determine the full-year budget for 2019-20.

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Steve Wynn's name stricken at U of Iowa; Mass. casino regulators say $7.5M settlement was hidden

Embattled gaming mogul Steve Wynn faced a double dose of fallout Wednesday from a bombshell report into his alleged history of sexual misconduct.

Gaming regulators in Massachusetts charged that information about Wynn's $7.5 million settlement was hidden from state officials and the University of Iowa cut ties with the casino billionaire.

The Wall Street Journal first reported that a number of women said they were harassed or assaulted by Wynn, 76, with one case leading to a $7.5 million settlement.

But a Massachusetts Gaming Commission investigator said Wednesday that information about that settlement was kept from state officials when they were reviewing his company's application for a casino license in 2013.

Wynn's company is currently building a $2.4 billion casino outside Boston. He has strongly denied the allegations against him, which he has linked to a supposed campaign led by his ex-wife.

Commission Chairman Stephen Crosby called the allegations "appalling" but said that any decision, including possibly revoking the license, would be based on facts gleaned during the commission's ongoing probe.

Gambling regulators in Nevada said Tuesday they are investigating Wynn as well. In both states, casino licenses can be revoked if the licensee is found unsuitable to operate a gaming establishment.

Also on Wednesday, the University of Iowa announced plans to remove Wynn's name from the school's vision research institute in light of sexual misconduct allegations against Wynn.

The university named the institute the Stephen A. Wynn Institute for Vision Research in 2013 following Wynn's $25 million donation to the school to support blindness research.  

Wynn was diagnosed in his 20s with retinitis pigmentosa, which has slowly compromised his vision. 

In a news release, the university in Iowa City said the plan is subject to the approval of the Iowa Board of Regents. It would be the first time the university has removed a donor name from a building or institute.

Wynn resigned Saturday as finance chairman of the Republican National Committee.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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New Orleans strip clubs reach settlements with state after 'lewd acts,' other violations

Six strip club owners in New Orleans reached settlements with the state of Louisiana on Wednesday after authorities temporarily revoked their liquor licenses over illegal activities. 

The disputes resulted from a series of raids that officials with the state Office of Alcohol and Tobacco Control (ATC) began Jan. 19, using undercover ATC agents, the New Orleans Times-Picayune reported

The six raided clubs were cited for solicitation of prostitution and the sales of drugs to the undercover agents, the newspaper reported. The clubs also received citations for "lewd acts," including exposure of body parts and illegal touching.

The Bourbon Street strip clubs reaching settlements were Scores, Temptations, Stilettos, Rick's Sporting Saloon, Rick's Cabaret and Lipstixx, the Times-Picayune reported. 

The clubs have agreed to "many provisions designed to address the issues leading to the emergency suspensions such as regular training, security monitoring, better screening of employees, discharge of employees engaged in criminal activity," the ATC said in a news release obtained by the Times-Picayune.

ATC officials have not disclosed the dates on which the clubs would be allowed to reopen, the newspaper reported. 

In response to the settlements, strip club workers formed a new organization called the Bourbon Alliance of Responsible Entertainers.

"We shared our experiences of the recent club raids and the harm they have caused us," the group said in a statement obtained by the Times-Picayune. "No matter what we contribute - to culture, to community, to civic life - we are not being treated as equal citizens. As long as law enforcement has an extortive relationship with businesses and an abusive relationship with workers, we will continue to suffer."

Click here for more from the Times-Picayune.

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Killer whale can mimic human voice, scientists discover

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May attends cultural reception accompanied by British ambassador in Beijing

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China, UK set up business council

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Dunhuang Yardang National Geopark covered in snow

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Polish Senate backs controversial Holocaust speech law

Poland's Senate has backed legislation regulating Holocaust speech that has sparked a diplomatic dispute with Israel and calls from the United States for a reconsideration of a bill seen as threatening freedom of speech.

The bill proposed by Poland's ruling conservative party calls for up to three years in prison for any intentional attempt to falsely attribute the crimes of Nazi Germany to the Polish state or people. It exempts artistic and research work.

Saying the bill defends Poland's good name, the senators voted early Thursday 57-23 to back the bill with two abstentions.

To become law, the bill requires approval from the president, who supports it.

Israel sees the move as an attempt to whitewash the role some Poles played in the killing of Jews during World War II.

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Anti-IS coalition says soldier dies in non-combat incident

The U.S.-led coalition against the Islamic State group says a service member has died in a "non-combat-related incident."

The statement released by the U.S. Central Command on Thursday did not give the soldier's nationality or provide further details. It says the soldier died Wednesday and that the incident is under investigation.

The soldier was part of Operation Inherent Resolve, the mission to defeat the Islamic State group in Iraq and Syria.

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Cambodian court again rejects bail for opposition leader

An appeals court in Cambodia has for the second time denied a request for the release on bail of opposition leader Kem Sokha, who has been charged with treason.

The Thursday court appearance in Phnom Penh by Kem Sokha, head of the Cambodia National Rescue Party, was his first since his arrest last September. His hearing was held behind closed doors and journalists and other onlookers were kept away.

His prosecution by the government of Prime Minister Hun Sen is widely seen as part of a concerted effort to cripple the opposition ahead of a general election this year.

Kem Sokha's lawyer, Choung Choungy, says the court cited concerns for his client's security in denying bail.

The government has expressed fears of political protests by Kem Sokha's supporters.

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Gunman reported dead after sheriff's office deputy shot in Texas

Following a standoff, a handcuffed suspect who fired on two Harris County Sheriff's Office deputies Wednesday night, injuring one of them, is "deceased in the residence," the sheriff's office announced via Twitter.

Specific details of the death were not immediately available, but the sheriff's office also tweeted that a woman was rescued from the house and was in "good condition."

One deputy was shot in an arm while responding to a disturbance call Wednesday night, and another narrowly escaped injury when a bullet grazed his pant leg, authorities said.

A second person, uninvolved in the altercation, also was shot after the two deputies responded to the call before 10 p.m., the Houston Chronicle reported

The officers identified a suspect and put handcuffs on him. The suspect then took a gun from his waistband and began firing at the deputies, Houston's ABC 13 reported. 

The officer shot in an arm was alert as he was transported to a nearby Memorial Hospital in the Woodlands, the Harris County Sheriff's Office said.

By 11 p.m. more than a dozen officers had arrived at the scene, closing off nearby streets to traffic. 

"Expect large police presence," Sheriff Ed Gonzalez tweeted. "Avoid the area."

By 11:30 p.m. the Harris County Sheriff's office tweeted, "UPDATE: Deputy involved in Kipland Way shooting was wounded in the arm and is alert, en route to Memorial Hermann in The Woodlands. Suspect believe to be inside home. #HouNews"

The motive for the shooting was not immediately known.

This is a developing story. Check back for updates.

Bradford Betz is an editor for Fox News. Follow him on Twitter @bradford_betz.

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Sporting beats Guimaraes 1-0 in Portuguese League soccer match

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Chunyun travel season kicks off at Beijing Railway Station

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Sheriff's office deputy shot in Texas; standoff underway

Hostage negotiators were trying early Thursday to coax out a handcuffed suspect who fired on two Harris County Sheriff's Office deputies Wednesday night, injuring one of them.

One deputy was shot in an arm while responding to a disturbance call before midnight Wednesday, and another narrowly escaped injury when a bullet grazed his pant leg, authorities said.

A second person, uninvolved in the altercation, also was shot after the two Sheriff's Office deputies responded to the call before 10 p.m., the Houston Chronicle reported

The officers identified a suspect and put handcuffs on him. The suspect then took a gun from his waistband and began firing at the deputies, Houston's ABC 13 reported. 

The officer shot in an arm was alert as he was transported to a nearby Memorial Hospital in the Woodlands, the Harris County Sheriff's Office said.

By 11 p.m. more than a dozen officers had arrived at the scene, closing off nearby streets to traffic. 

"Expect large police presence," Sheriff Ed Gonzalez tweeted. "Avoid the area."

By 11:30 p.m. the Harris County Sheriff's office tweeted, "UPDATE: Deputy involved in Kipland Way shooting was wounded in the arm and is alert, en route to Memorial Hermann in The Woodlands. Suspect believe to be inside home. #HouNews"

The suspect barricaded himself in a home where hostage negotiaters were trying to coax him out. 

The motive for the shooting was not immediately known.

This is a developing story. Check back for updates.

Bradford Betz is an editor for Fox News. Follow him on Twitter @bradford_betz.

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Wisconsin girl to be sentenced for Slender Man stabbing

One of two Wisconsin girls who tried to kill a classmate with a knife to appease fictional horror character Slender Man is expected to find out Thursday how long she'll spend in a mental institution for the attack.

Prosecutors want 15-year-old Morgan Geyser to spend the maximum 40 years in a mental hospital for stabbing Payton Leutner in suburban Milwaukee in 2014. But Geyser's attorneys will make their own case for what they believe is best for Geyser during a daylong hearing in Waukesha County Circuit Court.

The hearing will include victim impact statements and doctors who have evaluated Geyser. She pleaded guilty to attempted first-degree intentional homicide in October in a deal with prosecutors to avoid prison.

Geyser and Anissa Weier lured Leutner into the woods in a park and repeatedly stabbed her with a kitchen knife. Geyser stabbed Leutner 19 times while Weier urged her on, according to investigators. Leutner was left for dead but she crawled out of the woods and got help from a passing bicyclist. She and her attackers were all 12 at the time.

Weier was sentenced to 25 years in a mental hospital in December. She had pleaded guilty in August to being a party to attempted second-degree intentional homicide, but she claimed she wasn't responsible for her actions because she was mentally ill. In September, a jury agreed.

Geyser's attorneys have argued in court documents that she suffers from schizophrenia and psychotic spectrum disorder, making her prone to delusions and paranoid beliefs.

A psychiatrist hired by her attorneys previously testified that Geyser believed she could communicate telepathically with Slender Man and could see and hear other fictional characters, including unicorns and characters from the Harry Potter and Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles series. She also believed she had "Vulcan mind control."

Slender Man started with an online post in 2009, as a mysterious specter whose image people edit into everyday scenes of children at play. He is typically depicted as a spidery figure in a black suit with a featureless white face.

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Dallas man set to die for killing daughters, 9 and 6

Attorneys for a former Dallas accountant condemned for fatally shooting his two young daughters while their mother listened helplessly on the phone are hoping a federal court keeps him from the Texas death chamber.

John David Battaglia is set for execution Thursday evening for the May 2001 slayings of his 9-year-old daughter, Faith, and her 6-year-old sister, Liberty. Battaglia and his wife had separated and the girls were killed at his Dallas apartment during a scheduled visit.

He'd be the nation's third prisoner executed this year, all in Texas.

His lawyers had appeals before the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals and the U.S. Supreme Court, contending the 62-year-old Battaglia is delusional and mentally incompetent for execution.

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Trump critic and GOP pollster Frank Luntz: 'I owe Donald Trump an apology'

Conservative pollster Frank Luntz reconciled his 2015 public row with Donald Trump, saying Tuesday that he now owes the president an apology after his State of the Union address.

"Tonight, I owe Donald Trump an apology. Tonight, I was moved and inspired. Tonight, I have hope and faith in America again. It may go away tomorrow. But tonight, America is great again," Luntz wrote in a series of tweets.

"Even in foreign policy and national security this speech (is) a perfect blend of strength and empathy. These heroic stories break our hearts, but sturdy our resolve. This is the Trump his voters wanted him to be," Luntz continued.

"This is the Trump his voters wanted him to be."

- Pollster Frank Luntz, reacting to the president's State of the Union address

The pollster's praise for Trump did not stop there. He added that Trump's SOTU address "represents the presidential performance that Trump observers have been waiting for — brilliant mix of numbers and stories, humility and aggressiveness, traditional conservatism and political populism."

"Only one word qualifies: Wow," Luntz wrote, admitting in another tweet that he has "criticized the President's language a lot in recent months.

Luntz famously got into the public spat with then-candidate Trump in 2015 after he ran a focus group following the first Republican presidential debate that torched Trump's prospects of becoming the Republican nominee for president.

Trump accused the top Republican pollster – describing him as "unfair" and "terrible" – of running biased focus groups because he once refused to hire Luntz's research firm for the campaign.

"This has been going on, he's putting the arm on me all the time, and then he does these polls that are totally in violation of every other poll that was done," Trump told Business Outsider back then.

"I watch this guy do a really negative report on me, and the only reason he did it, in my opinion, is because I didn't want to hire him commercially."

Luntz denied the accusations at the time, saying he was focused only on conducting accurate focus groups, noting that Trump "launches an attack on everyone who is even remotely critical."

"If the group had said Donald Trump won this debate ... I would be the world's greatest pollster," Luntz told the publication. "Because it didn't, I'm not."

During the presidential election night in 2016, Luntz asked not be called a Republican anymore because of Trump. "I am not part of this," he told a Yahoo News host.

"I'm not part of that system, I'm not part of that negativity. This is not something I was involved in this year," he said. "I will leave it to others to explain and to try to get themselves out of this mess."

But not everyone accepted Luntz's embrace of Trump. MSNBC's "Morning Joe" co-host Mika Brezezinski, who had the pollster on the show Wednesday, criticized him for asking why people cannot give deserved credit to Trump.

"I think because he's literally screwed everybody in that room over a few times too many. He's been vulgar," she said. "He's been racist and accused one of the senators in that room of giving sexual favors for money. He's insulted the wife of a Republican senator in that room in the worst way possible."

She added: "You tell me that that room is supposed to respond like this (begins clapping her hands) to the great dictator."

Lukas Mikelionis is a reporter for FoxNews.com. Follow him on Twitter @LukasMikelionis.

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AP Exclusive: AP confirms 5 unreported Myanmar mass graves

The faces of the men half-buried in the mass graves had been burned away by acid or blasted by bullets. Noor Kadir could only recognize his friends by the colors of their shorts.

Kadir and 14 others, all Rohingya Muslims, had been choosing players for the soccer-like game of chinlone when the gunfire began. By the time the soldiers stopped shooting at the Myanmar village of Gu Dar Pyin, only Kadir and two teammates were still alive.

Days later, Kadir found six of his friends lying among the bodies in two graves.

They are among more than five mass graves, all previously unreported, that have been confirmed by The Associated Press through multiple interviews with more than two dozen survivors in Bangladesh refugee camps and through time-stamped cellphone videos. The Myanmar government regularly claims massacres like Gu Dar Pyin never happened, and has acknowledged only one mass grave containing 10 "terrorists" in the village of Inn Din. The AP's findings, however, suggest not only the military's slaughter of civilians but the presence of many more graves with many more people.

The graves are the newest piece of evidence for what looks increasingly like a genocide in Myanmar's western Rakhine state against the Rohingya, a long-persecuted ethnic Muslim minority in the predominantly Buddhist country. Repeated calls Wednesday and Thursday to Myanmar's military communications office were unanswered. Htun Naing, a local security police officer in Buthidaung township, where the village is located, said he "hasn't heard of such mass graves."

Myanmar has cut off access to Gu Dar Pyin, so it's unclear just how many people died, but satellite images obtained by the AP from DigitalGlobe show a village decimated. Community leaders have compiled a list of 75 dead so far, and villagers estimate the toll could be as high as 400, based on testimony from relatives and the bodies they've seen in the graves and strewn about the area.

Almost every villager interviewed by the AP saw three large mass graves at Gu Dar Pyin's northern entrance, near the main road, where witnesses say soldiers herded and killed most of the Rohingya. A handful of witnesses confirmed two other big graves near a hillside cemetery, and smaller graves scattered around the village.

In the videos obtained by the AP, dating to 13 days after the killing began, blue-green puddles of acid sludge surround corpses without heads and torsos that jut out from the earth, skeletal hands seeming to claw at the ground.

Survivors said soldiers planned the Aug. 27 attack, and tried to hide what they had done. They came to the slaughter armed not only with rifles, knives, rocket launchers and grenades, but also with shovels to dig pits and acid to burn away faces and hands so that the bodies could not be recognized.

After more than 200 soldiers swept into Gu Dar Pyin around noon, Mohammad Sha, 37, a shop owner and farmer, hid in a grove of coconut trees near a river with more than 100 others. They watched as the military searched Muslim homes and dozens of Buddhist neighbors, their faces partly covered with scarves, loaded the possessions they found into about 10 pushcarts. Then the soldiers burned down the homes, shooting anyone who couldn't flee, Sha said.

Mohammad Younus, 25, was crawling on his hands and knees after being shot twice when his brother carried him to some underbrush, where Younus lay for seven hours. At one point, he saw three trucks stop and begin loading dead bodies before heading off toward the cemetery.

Buddhist villagers then moved through Gu Dar Pyin in a sort of mopping-up operation, using knives to cut the throats of the injured, survivors said, and pitching the young and the elderly into fires.

Thousands of people from the area hid deep in the jungle, stranded without food except for the leaves and trees they tried to eat. From about 10 miles away another group of villagers watched from a mountain as Gu Dar Pyin burned, the flames and smoke snaking up into the sky.

In the days and weeks after the attack, villagers braved the soldiers to try to find whatever was left of their loved ones. Dozens of bodies littered the paths and compounds of the wrecked homes; they filled latrine pits. The survivors soon learned that taller, darker green patches of rice shoots in the paddies marked the spots where the dead had fallen.

Bloated bodies began to rise to the surface of the rain-saturated graves.

"There were so many bodies in so many different places," said Mohammad Lalmia, 20, a farmer whose family owned a pond that became the largest of the mass graves. "They couldn't hide all the death."

Eleven days after the attack, Lalmia was fleeing soldiers patrolling near the mosque when he discovered a human hand sticking out of a cleared patch of earth. Lalmia counted about 10 bodies on the grave's surface and estimated it held at least another 10.

Lalmia and other villagers also saw another large grave in the area, and smaller graves containing as many as 10 bodies scattered about the village.

On Sept. 9, villager Mohammad Karim, 26, captured three videos of mass graves time-stamped between 10:12 a.m. and 10:14 a.m., when soldiers chased him away, he said. In the Bangladesh refugee camps, nearly two dozen other Rohingya from Gu Dar Pyin confirmed that the videos showed mass graves in the north of the village.

About 15 days after the massacre, Rohima Khatu, 45, searched for her husband in the graves at Gu Dar Pyin's northern entrance, trying to identify him by his clothes.

"There were dead bodies everywhere, bones and body parts, all decomposing, so I couldn't tell which one was my husband," Khatu said. "I was weeping while I was there. I was crying loudly, 'Where did you go? Where did you go?'"

"I have lost everything."

___

Foster Klug has covered Asia for the AP since 2005. Follow on www.twitter.com/apklug

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Pakistani court disqualifies lawmaker for threatening judges

Pakistan's Supreme Court has disqualified a lawmaker from the ruling party for five years after finding him guilty of threatening judges in a speech last year.

In Thursday's decision, the court also sentenced Nehal Hashmi, of the Pakistan Muslim League, to one month in prison.

The decision came a day after Hashmi apologized over his May 2017 speech, in which he threatened judges for ordering a corruption probe against former Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif. In the speech, he said once the judges retire, "we will make your life and (the lives of) your family members miserable."

In July 2017, the Supreme Court disqualified Sharif from office for concealing assets.

Since then, Sharif himself has castigated judges for ousting him from power, but has faced no legal action over his speeches.

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Computers stolen in SF Bay Area being resold in Vietnam, police say

Police in the San Francisco Bay Area have linked numerous car break-ins to a multimillion-dollar crime operation that involves the sale of computer tablets and laptops on the black market in Vietnam.

A joint investigation by Fremont police and the Santa Clara County district attorney's office culminated in eight people charged, and more than $2 million in stolen goods seized, the San Francisco Chronicle reported.

"We want people to know the level of crime this is," Fremont police Lt. Mike Tegner said. "This isn't just a normal property crime."

An investigation identified Carlos Paz, 28, as the main 'fence,' a term for people who buy stolen items from street-level thieves and resell them.

During a surveillance operation, investigators followed Paz to a storage container with a stash of stolen electronic devices – mainly laptops – at a facility in San Jose, police said.

Investigators followed a semi-truck that left the facility and pulled it over on Interstate 880. The semi-truck contained $1 million worth of stolen electronics, which investigators believe were to be shipped to Southeast Asia.

Authorities believe the $2 million operation was a family affair. On Friday, 8 suspects were arraigned in connection with the operation, and charged with felony possession of stolen property and conspiracy.

Police are still investigating.

Click here for more from the San Francisco Chronicle.

Bradford Betz is an editor for Fox News. Follow him on Twitter @bradford_betz.

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Vietnam veterans recall all-female Tet Offensive squad

As a 19-year-old scout and spy for the communist forces in South Vietnam, Hoang Thi No remembers the determination and spirit of her 11-member team of young women who took part in the audacious Tet Offensive that turned the tide of the Vietnam War 50 years ago.

"If we didn't fight the enemy, they would destroy us all," she said. "We were young and weren't afraid. ... Once we had a strong ideology, we could do anything."

Her unit was known as the Perfume River Squad for the river that runs through Hue, Vietnam's cultural capital and third biggest city. Four of them died in the fighting that raged through the city for most of that February; two died later in the war.

They were part of a mobilization of as many as 80,000 fighters — regular soldiers from Communist North Vietnam, guerrillas of the National Liberation Front of South Vietnam, known as Viet Cong, and village militia — who launched virtually simultaneous surprise attacks on more than 100 cities, towns and U.S. military bases in South Vietnam the early morning hours of Jan. 31, 1968.

Official U.S. statistics for a month of fighting put the death toll at more than 58,000 enemy combatants, 3,995 American soldiers and 4,954 allied South Vietnamese troops plus 14,300 civilians.

"Psychologically, the war turned against the Americans at that point," said Alan Dawson, at the time a 26-year-old U.S. Army journalist in South Vietnam. "That attack in the Tet Offensive was really the moment that the final outcome of the war was decided to the communist advantage."

After an initial period of chaos, U.S. and South Vietnamese forces rallied to overwhelm the communist attackers, largely through the use of superior firepower.

Had the offensive been nipped in the bud everywhere, it might have been more clearly recognized as a major military defeat for the communists. But the tenacious Vietnamese guerrillas in Hue held out for about a month, helped by the work of the Perfume River Squad.

"Our duties were to enter the city to get information of movements and important locations of the enemy," No said. "We also mobilized local people to support the revolutionary forces by stocking up food and digging secret trenches and tunnels, getting ready for the fight. When the offensive started, we guided our major forces to various top important locations to fight the U.S Army in Hue city."

On Wednesday, No joined her comrades in Hue in marking the anniversary of the offensive with speeches and patriotic songs.

No suffers from a thyroid condition that doctors attribute to contact with Agent Orange, the herbicide that U.S. warplanes sprayed over large parts of Vietnam to try to deprive the communist forces of jungle cover.

The veterans, mostly in their 70s and 80s and some wearing their combat medals, looked happy just to get together, chatting in the hallways before the formalities, laughing as they shared wartime stories and posed for group photos taken with their smartphones. The hall where they were meeting was about a kilometer (half a mile) from Hue's famous Citadel, scene of the fiercest fighting, whose walls are still pockmarked with bullet holes among the moss.

Communist military planners of the Tet Offensive had hoped their attacks would incite a popular uprising to upset the balance in what had become a very costly and increasingly conventional war since the escalation of the U.S. military presence in 1965.

They also believed that a show of strength would weaken American political will, which they were well aware was wilting under pressure from anti-war sentiment back home.

Seeking to maximize psychological impact, they targeted high-profile targets in Saigon, the South Vietnamese capital now called Ho Chi Minh City. They included the Presidential Palace, Tan Son Nhut air base and most dramatically the U.S. Embassy, where sappers penetrated the outer perimeter but were shot down before they could get to the main building.

Dawson said the Americans and South Vietnamese knew an attack was coming, but didn't understand the scope of it. "The Viet Cong, for example, smuggled weapons into Saigon by the thousands; rifles, grenades, that kind of thing, including even in mock funerals they had, and they got the weapons in coffins into Saigon."

U.S. Marines spearheaded an allied effort to clear the communists in bitter house-to-house fighting in which neither side paid much heed to the safety of civilians. Dramatic footage of the harrowing fighting dominated U.S. television coverage, with devastating political effect. In March, embattled U.S. President Lyndon Johnson announced he would not run for another term and put limitations on bombing as a prelude to peace talks.

The fighting dragged on for seven more years, fueling U.S. street protests and convulsing American politics, before the North prevailed and the last Americans evacuated in 1975.

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Judge Andrew Napolitano: If the GOP memo is as advertised we’ll see the deep state at its most frightening

I have argued for a few weeks now that House Intelligence Committee members have committed misconduct in office by concealing evidence of spying abuses by the National Security Agency and the FBI. They did this by sitting on a four-page memo that summarizes the abuse of raw intelligence data while Congress was debating a massive expansion of FISA.

FISA is the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act of 1978, which was written to enable the federal government to spy on foreign agents here and abroad. Using absurd and paranoid logic, the secret Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court, which only hears the government's lawyers, has morphed "foreign intelligence surveillance" into undifferentiated bulk surveillance of all Americans.

Undifferentiated bulk surveillance is the governmental acquisition of fiber-optic data stored and transmitted by nearly everyone in America. This includes all telephone conversations, text messages and emails, as well as all medical, legal and financial records.

Ignorant of the hot potato on which the House Intelligence Committee had been sitting, Congress recently passed and President Donald Trump signed a vast expansion of spying authorities -- an expansion that authorizes legislatively the domestic spying that judges were authorizing on everyone in the U.S. without individual suspicion of wrongdoing or probable cause of crime; an expansion that passed in the Senate with no votes to spare; an expansion that evades and avoids the Fourth Amendment; an expansion that the president signed into law the day before we all learned of the House Intelligence Committee memo.

The FISA expansion would never have passed the Senate had the House Intelligence Committee memo and the data on which it is based come to light seven days sooner than it did. Why should 22 members of a House committee keep their 500-plus congressional colleagues in the dark about domestic spying abuses while those colleagues were debating the very subject matter of domestic spying and voting to expand the power of those who have abused it?

The answer to this lies in the nature of the intelligence community today and the influence it has on elected officials in the government. By the judicious, personalized and secret revelation of data, both good and bad -- here is what we know about your enemies, and here is what we know about you -- the NSA shows its might to the legislators who supposedly regulate it. In reality, the NSA regulates them.

This is but one facet of the deep state -- the unseen parts of the government that are not authorized by the Constitution and that never change, no matter which party controls the legislative or executive branch. This time, they almost blew it. If just one conscientious senator had changed her or his vote on the FISA expansion -- had that senator known of the NSA and FBI abuses of FISA concealed by the House Intelligence Committee -- the expansion would have failed.

Nevertheless, the evidence on which the committee members sat is essentially a Republican-written summary of raw intelligence data. Earlier this week, the Democrats on the committee authored their version -- based, they say, on the same raw intelligence data as was used in writing the Republican version. But the House Intelligence Committee, made up of 13 Republicans and nine Democrats, voted to release only the Republican-written memo.

Late last week, when it became apparent that the Republican memo would soon be released, the Department of Justice publicly contradicted President Trump by advising the leadership of the House Intelligence Committee in very strong terms that the memo should not be released to the public.

It soon became apparent that, notwithstanding the DOJ admonition, no one in the DOJ had actually seen the memo. So FBI Director Chris Wray made a secret, hurried trip to the House Intelligence Committee's vault last Sunday afternoon to view the memo. When asked by the folks who showed it to him whether it contains secret or top-secret material, he couldn't or wouldn't say. But he apparently saw in the memo the name of the No. 2 person at the FBI, Deputy Director Andrew McCabe, as one of the abusers of spying authority. That triggered McCabe's summary departure from the FBI the next day, after a career of 30 years.

The abuse summarized in the Republican memo apparently spans the last year of the Obama administration and the first year of the Trump administration. If it comes through as advertised, it will show the deep state using the government's powers for petty or political or ideological reasons.

The use of raw intelligence data by the NSA or the FBI for political purposes or to manipulate those in government is as serious a threat to popular government -- to personal liberty in a free society -- as has ever occurred in America since Congress passed the Alien and Sedition Acts of 1798, which punished speech critical of the government.

What's going on here?

The government works for us; we should not tolerate its treating us as children. When raw intelligence data is capable of differing interpretations and is relevant to a public dispute -- about, for example, whether the NSA and the FBI are trustworthy, whether FISA should even exist, whether spying on everyone all the time keeps us safe and whether the Constitution even permits this -- the raw data should be released to the American public.

Where is the personal courage on the House Intelligence Committee? Where is the patriotism? Where is the fidelity to the Constitution? The government exists by our consent. It derives its powers from us. We have a right to know what it has done in our names, who broke our trust, who knew about it, who looked the other way and why and by whom all this was intentionally hidden until after Congress voted to expand FISA.

Everyone in government takes an oath to preserve, protect and defend the Constitution. How many take it meaningfully and seriously?

Andrew P. Napolitano, a former judge of the Superior Court of New Jersey, is the senior judicial analyst at Fox News Channel. 

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Train carrying GOP lawmakers to retreat hits truck on tracks, 1 killed

A train carrying members of Congress to a Republican retreat in West Virginia slammed into a garbage truck Wednesday, throwing lawmakers from their seats and leaving at least one person dead, officials said.

Authorities identified the person killed as Christopher Foley, 28, of Louisa County, Va., one of two passengers inside the truck. The other passenger, still unidentified, was airlifted to the University of Virginia Medical Center with critical injuries.

The truck's driver, also still unidentified, was transported to a hospital with serious injuries, according to Madeline Curott, public information officer of the Albemarle County, Va., police department.

Several train passengers and crew members, including at least one lawmaker, were rushed to a local hospital for what were largely described as minor injuries. 

"It was a very high-speed collision," U.S. Rep. Jeff Denham, R-Calif., who was on board, told Fox News. "There was no braking that was felt. We hit an immediate impact and went from 70 to zero very quickly." 

According to numerous accounts, lawmakers on the scene sprung into action to help the injured, including by carrying one individual across the tracks to an ambulance. 

'It was a very high-speed collision.'

- Rep. Jeff Denham

There were mixed reports on whether the train actually derailed, but sources said the front engine ended up with wheels off the tracks. Lawmakers on the train quickly flooded social media with images of the wrecked truck, as well as damage to the crumpled front of the train. 

"There is one confirmed fatality and one serious injury. There are no serious injuries among members of Congress or their staff," White House press secretary Sarah Sanders said in a statement. "Senior Administration officials are in regular contact with Amtrak and state and local authorities. Our thoughts and prayers are with everyone that has been affected by this incident." 

After initially claiming there were no reported injuries to passengers or crew members, Amtrak later said two crew members and two passengers "were transported to a local hospital with minor injuries."

"Local law enforcement is investigating the incident," Amtrak said in a statement. 

One of those passengers was apparently U.S. Rep. Jason Lewis, R-Minn., who told Fox News he had a "little bit of a whiplash" and "maybe a tiny bit of a concussion." An aide to House Speaker Paul Ryan, R-Wis., also was taken to the hospital after suffering a head injury, his office said. 

Ryan was on the train but is fine, Fox News was told. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., was not on the train. 

The crash unfolded in Crozet, Va., near Charlottesville. Members were on a special chartered Amtrak train to the Greenbrier resort, where Vice President Pence was set to speak Wednesday night, with a planned appearance from President Donald Trump on Thursday. Trump confirmed that he still will be traveling to the retreat, adding that the crash was "a pretty rough hit, that's what they all tell me."

The retreat is where the party traditionally gathers to discuss its agenda and goals for the coming year -- and was starting a day after Trump's State of the Union address. 

The retreat is expected to go on as planned. The train -- which had a functional engine on the other end -- was able to run in reverse back to Charlottesville, where members were taking buses to West Virginia. 

While injuries on the train were largely described as minor, U.S. Rep. Roger Marshall, R-Kan., a medical doctor, tweeted that he was helping the injured immediately after the crash. 

"We are on our way to our annual GOP retreat, the train carrying members and spouses hit something. Laina and I are ok, I am helping those that are injured, I will have Laina keep you updated as I know more," he tweeted. 

A Politico reporter, U.S. Rep. Greg Walden, R-Ore., and others posted photos of the wreckage of the truck, where the most serious injuries were reported. 

In a phone interview from the train, U.S. Rep. Mark Walker of North Carolina described several helicopters in the air, saying there was also "lots of armed security" working to determine it was an accident and "there was no nefarious behavior." 

"We don't think that's the case," he told Fox News.

The crash is the latest tragedy to affect congressional Republicans, who were targeted in a shooting last summer at a baseball practice in northern Virginia. The lawmaker most seriously injured in that attack, U.S. Rep. Steve Scalise, R-La., was not on the train Wednesday. 

The crash also follows another fatal incident last January when a motorcade was shuttling Senate Democrats to their retreat in West Virginia. When an SUV stopped for the motorcade, the vehicle was rear-ended and exploded; the driver died. 

Fox News' Mike Emanuel, Alex Pappas and Jon Decker contributed to this report. 

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Lava spreads more than 2 miles from Philippine volcano

Lava flowing out a Philippine volcano has spread up to 3.6 kilometers (2.2 miles) since it began intense eruptions more than two weeks ago.

Streaks of red glowed atop the summit of Mount Mayon during a mild eruption Thursday morning as the moon set, hours after a blue moon and supermoon coincided with a lunar eclipse.

The Philippine Institute of Volcanology and Seismology said lava fountains and emissions of gas and ash have been sporadic. The eruptions fed lava flows in two areas that already exceed 3 kilometers (1.8 miles). The danger zone around Mayon extends 8 kilometers (5 miles), though authorities have struggled to keep villagers from returning to check on their homes and farms.

Scientists fear a more violent eruption could be imminent.

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Year after riot, Delaware prison still potentially explosive

One year after a deadly inmate riot and hostage-taking, Delaware's maximum-security prison remains a potentially explosive, understaffed facility managed by overworked guards overseeing hundreds of inmates with too much idle time on their hands.

An independent review ordered by Democratic Gov. John Carney after the riot at Vaughn Correctional Center includes scores of recommendations for reforms. But officials say many of those reforms depend on adequate staffing, which remains an elusive goal.

Department of Correction Commissioner Perry Phelps says he's encouraged by the progress officials have made, but inmates continue to complain about a lack of programs and inadequate medical care.

Meanwhile, the head of the state correctional officers' union says his members are exhausted, don't feel safe and are tired of being forced to work overtime.

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UN roundly condemned for blacklist of companies doing business in Israeli settlements

A report released by the U.N.'s Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (UNHRC) Wednesday, which seeks to make a database of companies doing business in Israeli settlements, was roundly condemned.

In a statement from United States Ambassador to the U.N., Nikki Haley said the report is "the latest anti-Israel actions taken by the Human Rights Council."

Haley said, "This whole issue is outside the bounds of the High Commissioner for Human Rights office's mandate and is a waste of time and resources."

Haley's statement said the report was another example of the council's "anti-Israel obsession."

Haley noted that, "The more the Human Rights Council does this, the less effective it becomes as an advocate against the world's human rights abusers. The United States will continue to aggressively push back against the anti-Israel bias, and advance badly needed reforms of the Council."

Israel's Ambassador to the world body, Danny Danon, called it a "blacklist."

In a statement before his speech to the United Nations marking the victims of the Holocaust, Danon slammed the announcement.

"On the day that the U.N. is marking International Holocaust Remembrance Day, the UNHRC has chosen to publicize this information about the number of companies operating in Israel."

Danon continued, "This is a shameful act which will serve as a stain on the UNHRC forever. We will continue to act with our allies and use all the means at our disposal to stop the publication of this disgraceful blacklist."

Speaking later on at the U.N. General Assembly Holocaust Remembrance event, he said the blacklist goes back to centuries-old, anti-Semitic boycotts: "The information published today by the Human Right's Council is more of the same. The Human Rights Council will now join history's infamous list of anti-Semites and bigots, who ultimately failed in their attempts to devastate the Jewish people."

Earlier Wednesday the U.N.'s Human Rights' office issued the report which it said detailed a database of business enterprises "engaged in certain, specific activities in the occupied Palestinian territory that are explicitly linked to Israeli settlements."

It stated that it enabled and supported the expansion of residential communities "beyond the green line."

The Human Rights Council, which the U.S. has threatened to leave, is known to be one of the most anti-Israel organizations within the United Nations. The database was set up by one of its many resolutions against the Jewish state.

The report said that it had "screened" 206 companies out of a total of 321 by the end of 2017. The majority of the companies were Israeli, followed by 22 U.S. companies and others from 19 countries.

Wednesday's report stopped short of naming the companies, but said upon engaging with all the companies and based on its determinations, it will release the names at a later date.

The report in part stated, "Businesses play a central role in furthering the establishment, maintenance and expansion of Israeli settlements." In what could be interpreted as a veiled threat to companies thinking about any future business investments there, the report said, "Business enterprises may need to consider whether it is possible to engage in such an environment in a manner that respects human rights."

Prince  Zeid Ra'ad al-Hussein, the U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights, said following the report's release that **it was produced in good faith, and that, "We hope that our work in consolidating and communicating the information in the database will assist states and businesses in complying with their obligations and responsibilities under international law."

Anne Herzberg of Israel-based NGO Monitor, which has been at the forefront fighting against the blacklist, said, "For more than a year, NGO Monitor has repeatedly warned that there are significant due process concerns with the creation of a U.N. blacklist of companies. In his report and in announcing previous delays, the high commissioner acknowledged the centrality of these issues."

Herzberg, who is the group's legal advisor, said, "NGOs, including Human Rights Watch, Amnesty International, and Al-Haq, have been advocating for this discriminatory blacklist for many years to advance a BDS (Boycott, Divestment, Sanctions) agenda. However, this does nothing to further human rights, and the U.N. should not devote further resources to this charade."

Ben Evansky reports for Fox News on the United Nations and international affairs.

He can be followed @BenEvansky

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Trump lets protected Syrians stay longer but caps enrollment

The Trump administration said Wednesday that it would allow nearly 7,000 Syrians to remain in the United States for another 18 months but won't let more Syrian citizens apply for the special protection program.

The decision was a partial relief for aid organizations and advocates for displaced Syrians who had feared President Donald Trump might end the program entirely, forcing those in the U.S. to leave or face deportation. Yet those same groups blasted the president for excluding more recent arrivals to the U.S., pointing out that Syria remains devoid of any notion of stability or normalcy.

Under a humanitarian program known as "Temporary Protected Status," thousands of Syrians have been allowed to avoid returning to their war-torn country of origin. The current program has been set to expire on March 31, forcing Trump to decide whether to extend.

Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen said "ongoing armed conflict and extraordinary conditions" justified giving those in the program another year and a half to remain in the U.S.

"After carefully considering conditions on the ground, I have determined that it is necessary to extend," Neilsen said.

Only those who have been in the United States since Aug. 1, 2016, are eligible for that extension, disqualifying newer arrivals. Still, Neilsen said those who came to the U.S. more recently "may be eligible to seek other forms of immigration relief."

Syria remains entangled in a bloody civil war with no signs of near-term resolution. Although the Islamic State group has been squeezed from almost all of its former territory, armed opposition groups continue to fight with each other, with Syrian President Bashar Assad's forces and with extremist groups that still pose a threat across Syria. U.S. military forces are active both on the ground and in the skies. In areas liberated from IS, the U.S. has said much work is needed to restore basic services like water, sewage and electricity.

"We made a commitment to offer safety to these people in a time of crisis," said Lia Lindsey of the aid group Oxfam. "Syria, without a doubt, continues to be unsafe and unstable."

Rep. Bill Pascrell, D-N.J., who had urged Trump to both extend the protections and let new arrivals apply, called the move a "missed opportunity." He added that the decision was "just another cruel way to leave people in need of assistance out in the cold."

The decision will be felt hardest in California, Michigan and Texas, top destinations for the roughly 86,000 Syrians living in the United States. It follows a contentious debate within the Trump administration about whether to cut off the program, with immigration hardliners in the White House urging a total halt to the program while the State Department and many lawmakers argued for continuing it.

Yet Trump has expressed frustration with the fact that under previous administrations, the United States has let foreigners stay long past when the natural disasters or other emergencies that necessitated the special protections were resolved. Nielsen has emphasized the protections should be temporary, and Trump advocates resettling Syrian refugees closer to home.

Since taking office, Trump has cut off the special protections for citizens of several countries, including Honduras and El Salvador, after determining that once-perilous conditions no longer preclude citizens from going home.

The U.S. created Temporary Protected Status in 1990 to provide a safe haven from countries affected by earthquakes, floods, hurricanes, war and other disasters, and it currently shields several hundred thousand people from 10 countries.

___

Spagat reported from San Diego. Associated Press writer Jill Colvin in Washington contributed to this report.

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UK students, teachers give thumbs up to Chinese approach to math

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U.S. missile defense test in Hawaii reportedly fails

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Man who used drone to smuggle drugs into US sentenced to 12 years in jail, officials say

A 25-year-old man who was previously arrested after using a drone to smuggle drugs across the U.S.-Mexico border has been sentenced to 12 years in prison, border officials announced.

A jury sentenced Jorge Rivera on Wednesday after he was convicted last week of trying to traffic 13 pounds of methamphetamine into the United States during the summer, according to a release from the U.S. Customs and Border Protection.

BORDER PATROL AGENTS FIND TUNNEL IN EL PASO THAT CONNECTS CITY TO STORIED PAST

Rivera was detained on the night of Aug. 8, 2017 after a border patrol agent saw a drone flying across the border near the San Ysidro Port of Entry, the original arrest report said.

An officer later reportedly located the suspect who was operating the drone and found him in possession of a bag containing "multiple plastic-wrapped packages containing methamphetamine."

The packages, 12 in total, were estimated to be worth $46,000, the CBP said. The drone in question was also reportedly found nearby, hidden under a bush.

drug drone

The drone used during the incident was recovered near a bush.  (U.S. Customs and Border Protection)

TRUMP'S BORDER WALL PROTOTYPES VIRTUALLY IMPASSABLE, PASS RIGOROUS TESTING

"We appreciate the determination, persistence, and hard work of all law enforcement partners involved in the case," Deputy Chief Patrol Agent Roy D. Villareal said following Rivera's sentencing. "The United States Attorney's Office and its diligent efforts have resulted in a successful prosecution and conviction, and a sentencing that should deter this type of criminal activity in the future."

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Kate Upton accuses Guess co-founder Paul Marciano of sexual misconduct

Kate Upton has publicly accused Paul Marciano, the co-founder of the Guess fashion line, of sexual misconduct in two separate social media posts.

On Wednesday, the 25-year-old Sports Illustrated model took to Twitter to name Marciano and lament his ability to still have power in the industry in the midst of the growing "#MeToo" movement sparked by allegations against Harvey Weinstein that led to the fall of many men in positions of power since October 2017.

"It's disappointing that such an iconic women's brand @GUESS is still empowering Paul Marciano as their creative director #metoo."

Soon after, she posted a screencap of her tweet on Instagram accompanied by another caption.

"He shouldn't be allowed to use his power in the industry to sexually and emotionally harass women #metoo," she wrote.

Upton did not give further details that would explain why she feels he is guilty of any misconduct. It's worth noting that, despite her use of the "#MeToo" hashtag, Upton did not specify that she was the victim of any misconduct. Her husband, Justin Verlander, retweeted her message to his followers as well.

According to the Guess website, Marciano co-founded the company with his brother in 1981 after moving from the south of France. So far, he has not made any statement on the matter.

Representatives for Guess did not immediately respond to Fox News' request for comment.

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2018 Spring Festival travel rush kicks off

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Seven soldier athletes set to join Team USA at the 2018 Olympic Winter Games

With just over a week before the start of the 2018 Olympic Winter Games in Pyeongchang, South Korea, Team U.S.A. added seven Army Soldiers to their roster to represent their country again but this time, they're showcasing their athletic ability.

2018 Olympian Card-SGT OLSEN Sized

Sgt. Justin Olsen from San Antonio, Texas, will return to the U.S. bobsled team where he was a gold medalist in the 2010 Olympic games in Vancouver.  (U.S. Army)

Two of the of the soldiers will be returning Olympians who have medaled in previous games. Sgt, Justin Olsen from San Antonio, Texas will return to the U.S. bobsled team where he was a gold medalist in the 2010 Olympic games in Vancouver and Cpt. Chris Fogt from Alpine, Utah, will also return to bobsled after he received a bronze medal in the 2014 games in Sochi, according to an Army press release.

2018 Olympian Card-CPT FOGT Sized

Cpt. Chris Fogt from Alpine, Utah, a bronze medalist in the 2014 games in Sochi, will join the bobsled team.  (U.S. Army)

Joining the two medalist will be former 2010 and 2014 Olympian Sgt. Nick Cunningham from Monterey, California. Sgt. 1st Class Nathan Weber, of the 10th Special Forces, will complete the bobsled team.

2018 Olympian Card-SGT CUNNINGHAM Sized

Former 2010 and 2014 Olympian Sgt. Nick Cunningham from Monterey, California also will be on the men's bobsled team.  (U.S Army)

Competing in singles Luge is Sgt. Emily Sweeney from Suffield, Conn. and Sgt. Taylor Morris from South Jordan, Utah. Sgt Matthew Mortensen from Huntington Station, N.Y. is competing in doubles luge.

2018 Olympian Card-SGT SWEENEY Sized

Sgt. Emily Sweeney from Suffield, Conn. is competeing in singles Luge.  (U.S. Army)

All but one are athletes in the U.S. Army Installation Management Command's World Class Athlete Program (WCAP).

2018 Olympian Card - SGT MORRIS Sized

Sgt. Taylor Morris from South Jordan, Utah also is competing in singles Luge.  (U.S. Army)

WCAP was established in 1997 and it gives soldiers, including the National Guard and the Army Reserve, the opportunity to participate in the Pan American Games, World Championships and Olympic and Paralympic competitions, according to the U.S. Department of Defense.  

2018 Olympian Card-SGT MORTENSEN Sized

Sgt. Matthew Mortensen from Huntington Station, N.Y. is competing in doubles Luge.  (U.S. Army)

This year's Winter Olympic team is currently made up of roughly 242 athletes, 135 men and 107 women. The opening ceremonies are scheduled for February 9.

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Wounded Missouri cop's road to recovery captured in emotional video

An injured Arnold, Mo., police officer's family is providing an emotional update on his condition. Ryan O'Connor was critically injured in a shooting on December 5, 2017. He was taken to a Colorado hospital for treatment.

A new video, with new images from his recovery, was posted to social media with a message of gratitude for everyone's generosity. The Arnold Police Department posted a video to Facebook with this caption:

"We've come so far in the last 57 days. This video is just a small reflection of our journey so far. We continue to celebrate each small victory that comes our way. This week we have celebrated Ryan puckering up for sweet kisses and successfully catching a small nerf ball with his left hand. As we continue our week full of intense therapy, we anticipate and look forward to sharing more triumphs. Despite our distance from home we still feel all the love and encouragement you continue to send our way. Thanks to each of you for supporting our family in so many ways. We are touched by your thoughtfulness and generosity."

O'Connor was shot in the back of the head while transporting a prisoner to the Arnold Police Station. The suspect then shot himself and later died as a result.

This story originally appeared on Fox 2.

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Texas girl, 9, that Trump said he'd pray for, is out of ICU after brain surgery, family says

On behalf of President Trump, White House Press Secretary Sarah Sanders asked the nation on Jan. 23 to pray for a little girl in Texas who was prepping for an upcoming surgery for a rare brain condition, KFOR reported. And it appears that those prayers were answered after the girl's father said Sunday that his daughter was out of the ICU and "getting back to her normal, goofy, silly self."

"Sophia is out of ICU, she is in a regular room and doing well!" Scott Andy Peters said on Facebook. "Physical Therapist says she looks great. She is eating pizza and watching Frozen, getting back to her normal, goofy, silly self."

Nine-year-old Sophia Marie Campa-Peters, of Brownfield, Texas, had surgery at Boston Children's Hospital on Friday for "a rare disease that causes the blood vessels in her brain to narrow and close," according to the statement from the White House. The condition has reportedly caused the girl to suffer a number of strokes throughout her young life, some of which left her partially paralyzed.

Word of her condition and pending operation made its way to the desk of President Trump. Peters reportedly hoped to get 10,000 people to pray for her on the day of her surgery.

"We want to make sure she gets that and far exceeds it," Sanders said during the press briefing on Jan. 23. "So today, Sophia, I'm here to tell you that millions of people from every corner of the world will be praying for you on January 26th."

"And among those will be people and all of us here at the White House, including President Trump," Sanders continued. "He told me to tell you to keep fighting, to never give up, keep inspiring us all, and never, ever lose faith in God. With Him, all things are possible."

Over the course of Peters' diagnosis, Sanders said the girl demonstrated bravery and inexplicably overcame obstacles "leaving her doctors dumfounded."

Despite undergoing a number of surgeries, Sanders said Peters "has faced each one of them with a fearless exuberance for life that warms the heart of everyone she meets."

An update Monday on a Twitter page set up for the girl said she was doing "so great" and doctors were even considering sending her home.

"Sophia is doing so great!" the post said. "Her strength and attitude are just simply wonderful! They are even talking about sending us home soon because she is recovering so well."

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Keepers carry food to feed monkeys on snowy days

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Rose McGowan gives impassioned response to Harvey Weinstein's rape denial

Rose McGowan says it's time for Harvey Weinstein to drop his story about a "consensual" relationship.

"He can fall off the planet," the activist said during an interview with The Associated Press on Wednesday. "My statement is truth. My statement is reality. Stop saying it's consensual, you pig! You know it's not true."

Weinstein issued a statement Tuesday that quoted an alleged email from McGowan's former manager, saying that the actress had spoken of a consensual encounter with him. Weinstein is accused by multiple women of sexual misconduct, revelations that helped lead to allegations against Matt Lauer, Charlie Rose and dozens of other men.

McGowan, 44, is promoting a trilogy (a "holy trinity without the 'holy,'" she calls it) of new projects this week, including the album "Planet 9," the E! docuseries "Citizen Rose" and the memoir "Brave."

Her book includes a graphic account of being assaulted by the movie producer, whom she calls "the monster," in a hotel 20 years ago. Besides her comment to the AP, McGowan issued a statement Wednesday saying that his remarks were part of an ongoing effort to "smear" her.

"It is an affront not only to Rose but to the hundreds of women who have come forward with their stories of harassment, sexual abuse and rape perpetrated by Mr. Weinstein and those like him," the statement reads in part. "This is a sad, pathetic old-fashioned sexist attempt to undermine obvious truth and the gaslighting will no longer be tolerated."

McGowan signed a deal for "Brave" in 2016, well before the current #MeToo movement, but says she knew all along the world would change — in part because she would change it. "Brave" describes her survival of what she calls a lifetime of attempted brainwashing, whether the Christian-influenced cult her family belonged to as a child to her years in Hollywood.

"This is not a tell-all," she writes. "This is a tell-it-how-it-is."

McGowan is known for such films as "Scream" and "Going All the Way," and for the TV series "Charmed." But she says she's done with acting and describes her time on screen as "just a job" and scorns the recent reboot of "Charmed" as an idea "so flaccid." She did enjoy directing "Dawn," a short film about an innocent girl's murder she has likened to her time in the movie business.

Harvey Weinstein

Harvey Weinstein released a statement denying accusations of rape from Rose McGowan.  (Reuters)

And she is anxious to work in other art forms. A fan of such authors as Isabel Allende and Gabriel Garcia Marquez, whose "Love in the Time of Cholera" she re-reads each year, McGowan says she's thinking about writing a "fiction-ish" story about an 11-year-old girl. During her interview, she also spoke of her love for visual art and music and of the liberating feeling of working behind a camera instead of front of it.

She also has some thoughts about the Time magazine cover story on "The Silence Breakers."

Here are highlights:

____

ON KNOWING 'BRAVE' WOULD COME OUT AMID THE #MeTOO MOVEMENT:

"Of course I did. I'm the architect, how would I not know? My book was never meant to come out to deaf ears. I always had to smash the Hollywood propaganda machine first; this was not an accident. This was not a case of being the first one to speak. This was me being behind the scenes."

ON HOW IT FELT TO TELL HER STORY:

"It was so traumatizing to write in a lot of ways, just because you write a passage and you have to go to dinner and put on a good girlfriend face or human face and go out into the world and really you want to do is bend over and scream. What everybody throughout the writing, people that I know, would say, 'Is it cathartic?' and I would say, 'No, not yet, I'm waiting for that day.'"

ON NEVER ACTING AGAIN:

"I've done enough public service in that form. I've done enough. My job was to teach a core group of followers and fans and people that responded how 'to feel.' I did it. They understood. We're moving on now to the brain. It's not anybody's job to keep me in the past. It's nobody's job."

ON WHY SHE WON'T RUN FOR OFFICE:

"I'm global, my work is global and my work is outside of the system. And my work is to look at the power structure. I don't believe in borders. I don't believe in laws, especially in laws related to women's bodies."

ON HER DISLIKE OF TIME MAGAZINE'S PHRASE 'THE SILENCE BREAKERS' FOR ITS PERSON OF THE YEAR COVER STORY:

"'The silence breakers.' How dare you. You just didn't listen. That's a misnomer. It's erroneous and it runs a false narrative. Like as if all of a sudden we all just gained the guts to talk. No stupid, you just gained the guts to listen."

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San Francisco will wipe out thousands of marijuana convictions dating back decades

The city of San Francisco plans to retroactively apply California's current marijuana legalization laws to past criminal cases dating back decades, the district attorney's office announced Wednesday.

The new policy will apply Proposition 64 to nearly 5,000 felony marijuana convictions and more than 3,000 misdemeanors dating as far back as 1975, District Attorney George Gascón said.

WITH NEW YEAR, CALIFORNIA'S RECREATIONAL POT LAWS TAKE EFFECT

"While drug policy on the federal level is going backwards, San Francisco is once again taking the lead to undo the damage that this country's disastrous, failed drug war has had on our nation and on communities of color in particular," the district attorney said of the plan.

The thousands of felony convictions in the state for pot use will be reviewed, recalled and resentenced, and the misdemeanors will be dismissed and sealed, Gascón said.

While California was the first state to allow marijuana use for medicinal purposes, Proposition 64 — which became law in 2016 and allowed for legal pot sales in 2018 — allows adults 21 or older to legally use and grow cannabis, in addition to possessing up to one ounce of it.

SESSIONS' PLANNED MARIJUANA CRACKDOWN DRAWS FIRE FROM POLITICIANS, GROWERS

Criminal convictions "can be a barrier to employment, housing and other benefits," Gascón said. 

California Lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom said he hopes the policy will help alleviate the burden of the convictions to "primarily people of color, whose lives were long ago derailed by a costly, broken and racially discriminatory system."

More than two million people were arrested in California between 1915 and 2016 for marijuana, but, according to the DA's office, only 4,885 residents have filed petitions to have their convictions reduced or removed.

Nicole Darrah covers breaking and trending news for FoxNews.com. Follow her on Twitter @nicoledarrah.

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Limited promise from Trump plan, Chinese firms ‘unlikely’ to get large slice of action

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Teenager with scalp condition shaves her head after being attacked by bullies, feels ‘free’

A Tennessee high school student attacked by bullies who pulled off her wig, says she has taken back control by shaving her head.

Lauren "Lulu" Williams at Franklin High School wore a wig because she was insecure about her patches of missing hair – caused by eczema and psoriasis that she has had since birth.

"I've never told anyone [about the condition] because I was embarrassed by it and I felt like I'm not as beautiful as all these other girls because my hair is like this," Lulu said to Fox 19.

STUDENT CLAIMS SHE WAS CALLED OUT FOR 'INAPPROPRIATE' OUTFIT, UNSURE WHY

Though the 16-year-old wore the wig to help her confidence, she was still plagued by constant thoughts about her hair.

"She's like, 'What if someone took my wig off?' She's like so scared about it all the time. It was like the main thing she always thought of," her mother, Myckelle Williams, told Fox 19.

On Friday, her fear became a reality when another student at school ran up to her and pulled her wig off before sprinting away. The assault was recorded on Snapchat with a caption "weave snatchin'."

"I immediately held my head and ran to the bathroom," Lulu said. "… I ran to the stall and could hear people laughing like seeing them videotaping."

"I feel like there are a lot of parents who are hurt by their action. I feel like there are a lot of kids being victimized and it's not being handled correctly."

- Myckelle Williams

Lulu said she was followed into the bathroom by a female peer who laughed and continued to record her over the stall she was hiding in while she was crying.

Myckelle said Lulu was taken to the hospital to be treated for scalp abrasions and whiplash. When the wig, which was secured with clips and glue, was ripped off her head, her natural hair and skin was torn off as well, The Tennessean reports.

"Her head was hurting. Her neck was hurting. Her scalp was hurting, and she was just crying," Myckelle said. "The goal is when you send your kids to school, you're automatically assuming they're going to be safe and protected. And I'm feeling like she's not protected."

"I feel like there are a lot of parents who are hurt by [the school's] action. I feel like there are a lot of kids being victimized and it's not being handled correctly," she added.

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Lulu, who has dealt with bullying since she arrived at the high school two years earlier, was frustrated with the constant torment about her condition, so she decided to respond to the attack by shaving her head.

"Your beauty isn't defined by the number of strands on your head," she said. "Ever since I [shaved] it, I feel free. I'm not held down by my hair. I'm not defined by it — I'm defining myself." 

Since shaving her head, Lulu has said she has received praise from other people experiencing the same or similar conditions that cause hair loss.

One person told her, "I have so much respect for you and I think that you are so brave for doing what you did," Fox 19 reported.

Meanwhile, a spokeswoman for Williamson County Schools said bullying is not tolerated and that they would be investigating the incident.

"This type of behavior can never be tolerated at school. In addition to school discipline, WCS prosecutes delinquent behavior to the fullest extent of the law," said Williamson County Schools spokesperson Carol Birdsong in a statement

It is unclear how many were involved in the bullying incident, or if any students have been disciplined.

Myckelle said she would be pressing charges.

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