Society's Child
The 57-year-old man decided to rest in the cabin while hunting deep in a forest in the Irkutsk region of eastern Siberia. He briefly left the cabin to fetch some fresh water and when he returned he was startled to learn that a wild bear was rooting around in his belongings.
"To avoid an encounter with the animal, the hunter scurried off into the woods where he hid for several hours," the regional Interior Ministry said in a statement, as cited by TASS.
The local hunter, identified as Thomas B. Jadlowski, fired a single shot with his pistol on Wednesday after "he believed he saw a deer in a field" in the town of Sherman, the Chautauqua County sheriff's office said. He then heard a woman screaming in agony.
The bullet hit 42-year-old Rosemary Bilquist, who was walking her dogs in the field behind her house, in the hip. The man heard her scream and immediately ran towards her, finding Rosemary some 200 yards (182 meters) away and calling 911. Until the ambulance arrived, Jadlowski stayed with the woman and applied pressure to her wound. However, Rosemary succumbed to her wound at a Pennsylvania hospital.
Women who turned 45 in 2016 had an average of 1.80 children, down from 2.21 for their mothers' generation, who turned 45 in 1944.
The same generation also had fewer children by their 30th birthday, suggesting women are having children later in life. Women who turned 45 last year had 1.06 children by 30 compared to 1.8 in their mother's generation.
In total, 18 per cent of women who turned 45 last year had no children at all, compared with 11 per cent of women in their mother's generation.
The ONS said the figures, collected from birth registration data going back to the 1930s, defined 45 as the age by which most women had stopped having children.
Teenage motherhood is also dropping, with just 6 per cent of women having had at least one child before their 20th birthday.
A UN plane with humanitarian aid workers has arrived this morning in the Yemeni capital, Sana, for the first time since Saudi-led coalition closed all Yemeni ground, air and sea ports, Reuters reported citing the spokesman of the UN World Food Programme (WFP).
The Sanaa airport officials have confirmed that two other humanitarian flights had landed in Yemen on Saturday.
The steam-powered rocket was scheduled to take off in Amboy, California, a ghost town in the Mojave Desert along route 66, but Hughes couldn't get permission from the Bureau of Land Management to conduct the launch. Hughes claims he was given verbal permission over a year ago while awaiting final approval from the Federal Aviation Authority (FAA).
"It's still happening. We're just moving it three miles down the road," Hughes told The Washington Post Friday. "This is what happens anytime you have to deal with any kind of government agency. I don't see [the launch] happening until about Tuesday, honestly. It takes three days to set up... You know, it's not easy because it's not supposed to be easy."
Comment: This contraption looks like a death trap if he really plans to actually ride in that thing.
The hours were better at her nonprofit jobs. So were the benefits. But two years ago, the 32-year-old Whitehurst - who graduated from a liberal arts college and grew up in the Chicago suburbs - abandoned Washington for this three-acre farm in Upper Marlboro, Md.
She joined a growing movement of highly educated, ex-urban, first-time farmers who are capitalizing on booming consumer demand for local and sustainable foods and who, experts say, could have a broad impact on the food system.
For only the second time in the last century, the number of farmers under 35 years old is increasing, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture's latest Census of Agriculture. Sixty-nine percent of the surveyed young farmers had college degrees - significantly higher than the general population.
This new generation can't hope to replace the numbers that farming is losing to age. But it is already contributing to the growth of the local-food movement and could help preserve the place of midsize farms in the rural landscape.
"We're going to see a sea change in American agriculture as the next generation gets on the land," said Kathleen Merrigan, the head of the Food Institute at George Washington University and a deputy secretary at the Department of Agriculture under President Barack Obama. "The only question is whether they'll get on the land, given the challenges."
Comment: Kudos to those taking up the challenge and working hard to provide better food alternatives to Big Agra.

Esteban Vasquez, a UC Berkeley senior, gets off a bus with bags of groceries he bought with CalFresh food stamps.
The provisions there are free.
"I'm low on funds," shrugged Christopher, a junior, as he stuffed apple juice, a half gallon of milk, a box of peanut butter Puffin cereal and two cans of organic pinto beans and sweet corn - the UC Berkeley Food Pantry's five-item limit - into his backpack.
Comment: Maybe students wouldn't be put into this position if their tuition fees weren't so outrageous.
- The US leads the world in high college tuition fees
- Tuition, living costs and bleak future: UK society not safe for young people
- Sad state of affairs: College students resorting to prostitution to cover tuition
- Million Student March: Students across the US unite to protest student debt and tuition fees
- Sugar babies: Female college students are literally selling themselves to cover rising tuition costs
- Thousands of Students March in Montreal Against Tuition-Fee Hikes
One soldier-barely older than your children himself-grabs your 15-year-old son, binds his arms behind his back, and blindfolds him. Without a word to you, the soldiers haul the boy outside to their vehicle and throw him onto the floor at the back, pistol-whipping him before speeding away.
Hours later, your son's blindfold is removed but his arms remain bound. From the moment he is kidnapped, he is not permitted to use the bathroom or given water or food. He is surrounded by foreigners speaking a language he cannot understand, and he is denied legal counsel. Your child is taken to an interrogation room and bullied into confessing a "crime"-insulting the honor of a soldier, for instance, or throwing stones at a wall. Like you, your son was born into a military occupation and under military law a soldier's honor is worth 10 years of your son's life.
Atlanta, GA - According to the official historical record, in 1621, the Plymouth colonists and Wampanoag Indians shared an autumn harvest feast that is acknowledged today as one of the first Thanksgiving celebrations in the colonies. For over a century, families have gathered to proclaim what they are thankful for while others have taken to shelters and charities to help those who cannot help themselves. However, thanks to the state, helping others during this most giving time is now illegal-unless you pay the government for permission.
During this Thanksgiving week, Adele Maclean and Marlon Kautz took to the streets to begin handing out food to the homeless-like they do every week. However, this time, instead of receiving praise for their services, they were issued a notice of extortion by police in the form of a citation.
Comment: You can watch the WSB-TV report here.
Outrageous! What are these Good Samaritans thinking? Don't they know that Thanksgiving is for people to turn into violent zombies and go out on a Black Friday bargain-hunting expedition?
Walking Dead: Shootings, brawls, babies injured in Black Friday madness

Hamilton County residents overwhelmingly voted for a half-percent sales tax increase and municipal bonds to pay for Paul Brown Stadium to keep the Bengals from leaving Cincinnati, but the deal hasn't been good for taxpayers.
Taxpayers in Hamilton County, Ohio, where Cincinnati is located, feared something greater than wounded civic pride if their football team left. They worried that the Bengals' departure would spur an economic crisis throughout the region. A University of Cincinnati study released at the time estimated that the Bengals added $77 million to the local economy.
Hamilton County residents could avert disaster, however. All they needed to do was vote for a modest half-percent sales tax increase. The tax increase and municipal bonds would cover the estimated $287 million needed to build the Bengals' new home.
Comment: The NFL is increasingly being put under the economic microscope as of late in the wake of the controversy surrounding the financial hit they're taking from backlash against the 'kneeling protests'. In these hard economic times, lavish NFL stadiums that cost the taxpayer money are hard to justify. Especially when no one is going to the games. See:
- NFL kneeling backlash continues in week 11: Empty seats plague multiple stadiums
- Plummeting NFL ratings prompt TV execs to suggest canceling ten 'Thursday Night Football' games
- Dallas Cowboys owner: NFL is suffering serious damage from anthem protests
- NFL: Now officially the least popular pro sports league in the U.S.
- NFL is 'hemorrhaging' viewers from all backgrounds














Comment: See also: Empire in decline: CDC reports US birth rates are falling while deaths from age-related diseases are rising