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YOSEMITE NATIONAL PARK – A hiker died after falling from Half Dome at Yosemite National Park Monday, according to KABC.The hiker fell from the Half Done cables while hiking with another person during a thunderstorm around 4:30 p.m. Monday.The National Park Service says the death is the first fatality at that particular spot since 2010. It’s also the first time a visitor died this year.The identity of the hiker hasn’t been released and no further details are being made available at this time. 514
Wolverines have been spotted on Washington’s Mount Rainier, and it’s causing quite a stir.For the first time in more than 100 years, a mother and two offspring, called kits, were photographed in Mount Rainier National Park.“It’s really, really exciting,” said Mount Rainier National Park Superintendent Chip Jenkins in a statement from the National Park Service. “It tells us something about the condition of the park— that when we have such large-ranging carnivores present on the landscape that we’re doing a good job of managing our wilderness.”Scientists are hopeful that the sighting of a reproductive female and kits means wolverines may start returning to the park. Camera stations were installed in 2018 to photograph and identify wolverines based on their distinctive chest fur patterns. The stations can also detect if the wolverine is a lactating female, as is the case with the one spotted recently. 919

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at an El Paso, Texas, Walmart. Army Private First Class Glendon Oakley Jr. was shopping when it happened.“I’m thinking, if I have a child, what I would want somebody else to do,” said Oakley, 22. The soldier ran toward the sound of gunfire.“I have my license to carry, so I just pulled out my gun and I’m in the military as well. So we’re trained to when you’re in danger, you pull out your weapon. You find cover, you save whoever you can,” said Oakley. When he arrived, he saw children separated from their parents scrambling to find safety. He began scooping up children.“I tried to get other people, you know, to grab other kids but they’re so worried about themselves, they’re gone,” Oakley said. Taking as many as he could carry, he brought the children outside to safety.Even after the shooting had come to an end, his focus wasn’t on himself. Instead, he worried about the children that will remember this day for the rest of their lives.Many turned to social media to express their thanks for Oakley's brave service."We salute you, Private First-class Oakley. Thank you," the Sheriff's Association of Texas wrote in a Facebook post. 1143
after the Trump administration imposed tariffs on Chinese goods.For Mark Ulness and his family from Manitowoc County, Wisconsin, it's the one time of year their hard work in the barn gets recognized by the masses.Some dairy farmers said being at the Wisconsin State Fair is a getaway from the everyday issues their industry is facing."We make sure (the cows are) fed before we eat a lot of times," Ulness said.As a fifth-generation dairy farmer, Ulness has seen the ups and downs of the industry, but nothing quite like the challenges of the last five years."As a family farmer, it's tough to see friends and neighbors go out, but we understand the struggles that they're going through," he said.Ulness said those struggles started when dairy prices plummeted in 2014 due to a milk surplus. Tariff implications over the last few years have only made the industry's outlook grimmer.According to the U.S. Department of Agriculture, Wisconsin lost 700 dairy farmers last year. It is the topic at the center of many political debates."Some of the farmers are really doing well," President Donald Trump told a crowd in Milwaukee a few weeks ago. "We're over the hump, we're doing really well, and in the meantime our government has billions of dollars pouring in and that money is paid for by China.""The farm foreclosure capital of the United States is, unfortunately, America's dairyland, Wisconsin," said Democratic National Committee Chair Tom Perez.Heather Larson of Darlington, Wisconsin knows of fellow dairy farmers dealing with more than money issues."He had two friends already this year commit suicide because of dairy farming," Larson said.Ulness is thankful his farm is still afloat, but it's come with sacrifices."My wife has a job off the farm, and a lot of times she'd prefer just to be at the farm working," he said.This story was originally published by Ben Jordan on 1883
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