From Today's Sponsored Advertiser: | | | What If You Could Pick Stocks With A 97% Accuracy Rate? | | | By clicking on this link, you are agreeing to receive additional information from our sponsor. For full details on what you may receive, and how your information is used, please view this Privacy Policy. | | | | |
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According to police records, the three Colorado youths who are suspected of throwing a rock through the window of a 20-year-old motorist and killing her went back to the scene of the collision and took a photo of the victim's car as a "memento." According to authorities, Alexa Bartell was killed last Wednesday night in Arvada when Joseph Koenig, Nicholas "Mitch" Karol-Chik, and Zachary Kwak are accused of throwing a large landscaping stone through Alexa Bartell's windshield. Bartell's car crashed in a field, and she died on the scene. After the teens fled, Kwak allegedly told the others, "We have to go back and see that," according to an arrest affidavit. They returned, and Kwak took a photo of the car as a "memento." | |
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From today’s advertiser: Strange Indicator Called Crashes on ZM, PTON & DWAC… Here’s what it’s saying now. Today, a world class trading expert is going to give us the A to Z rundown on how what he calls his “Master Indicator” By clicking the link above you agree to periodic updates from WealthPress and its partners (privacy policy) |
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Oftentimes, when you think of eating healthier, you think of eating a sandwich. And while there are some healthy aspects of a sandwich, it can also quickly become and unhealthy meal. That's because the ingredients you choose to include can make or break how healthy your sandwich really is. For example, piling high fresh veggies on whole grain bread is a great move, while slathering on mayonnaise, extra cheese, and sodium-packed deli meats is not. Those unhealthy ingredients can be especially harmful to your heart health. So, how exactly can you make a sandwich heart-healthy?
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According to economic data released on Friday that the Federal Reserve constantly monitors, inflation climbed again in March despite a year's worth of interest rate increases. The price index for discretionary purchases outside of food and energy rose by 0.3% in the month, matching the Dow Jones prediction. The annual increase in so-called core PCE was 4.6%, which was higher than the 4.5% forecast but lower than February's gain of 4.6%. Headline PCE, which excludes the more volatile food and energy components, increased by only 0.1% month-over-month, or 4.2% annually. This is significantly lower than February's 5.1% gain. In June 2022, that indicator reached its highest point since December 1981, hovering around 7%. | From Today's Sponsored Advertiser: | | | | | Earlier this year, the U.S. endured the second-largest bank failure in its 246-year history. This failure in the banking system – combined with soaring inflation and a volatile stock market – has triggered what could prove to be a historic bull market for gold. But that doesn’t mean investing in physical gold is the best (or only) option. Instead, the best way to play this massive gold bull market may come as a surprise... I’ve prepared a Free Report – which you can download now – that reveals 3 of the top gold investments poised to soar in the next 12 months. | | | (By clicking this link, you will automatically be opted in to receive emails from our sponsor. For more specific details on what that means, please view their Privacy Policy.) | | | | |
On Thursday, former Vice President Mike Pence testified for more than five hours to a federal grand jury regarding the actions of Donald Trump and others involved in the January 6 insurrection. Adviser Marc Short did not confirm the appearance, but he did address the legal back-and-forth. "I think that the vice president, you know, had his own case based on the Speech and Debate Clause. He was pleased that for the first time a judge acknowledged that it applied to the vice president of the United States." Here's what Pence was set to speak on while under oath. |
Source: Dr. Sebastian Voltmer |
The Picts, the "painted people" of Scotland who resisted the Romans, were not a mysterious tribe who traveled from other countries, according to ancient DNA. A new study reveals that the Picts actually had local roots and were related to other Iron Age Britons. Contrary to what historians have long assumed, examining eight bones from two Pictish cemeteries reveals that the Picts did not structure their society around the female bloodline. The Picts were a people who, in the third century A.D., rebelled against Roman power and established their own kingdom in northern Britain, which lasted until roughly the year 900. The name "Picts" comes from the Latin word "picti" for their alleged use of body paint or tattoos. There is very little written information about the Picts. However, archaeologists and historians have begun tackling the "Pictish problem" in recent years to better understand this culture. |
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