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Saving kittens all in a days work for Phx officers.These two kittens had been soaked with gasoline and thrown out of a plastic bag. Officers Bagnall and Friday rescued them from the area of 35th Ave. & Dunlap. The kittens are now safe and receiving care at the Humane Society. pic.twitter.com/7wp0ZYEIuO— Phoenix Police Department (@phoenixpolice) November 24, 2019 381
PUEBLO, Colo. — On the afternoon of November 4, 2019, the U.S. Attorney's office announced the arrest of Richard Holzer, a white supremacist who they say had plans to bomb a Jewish synagogue in Pueblo,Colorado, about two hours south of Denver. "We are here today to announce that federal law enforcement, working in conjunction with the Pueblo Police Department, has successfully stopped what we believe to be an imminent threat of domestic terrorism against a Colorado religious institution," authorities said.Authorities say Holzer met up with three undercover FBI agents to purchase bombs in a planned attack against Temple Emanuel, the second oldest synagogue in the state.According to a criminal complaint, FBI agents had been talking with Holzer since September, tracking multiple Facebook accounts of his in which he talked to other white supremacists through private messages about attacking Jewish people. In one message, Holzer said, "I wish the Holocaust really did happen." Holzer told undercover agents he hired someone to poison the synagogue's water supply and was now preparing for a "racial holy war.""Jewish community is tiny in Pueblo," one Colorado woman said. "And we all know each other and support one another and our children."Thirty-five families are part of this small congregation. Michael Atlas-Acuna, the president of Temple Emanuel's board of directors, is still a bit shaken by the plot to blow up a synagogue that was built in 1900. "I looked at the building and the inside, and I thought, 'God, we could have lost this,' " he said.If there's a silver lining to take away from the foiled terror plot, it's that the congregation is now stronger than ever before. It was a packed house at a recent Friday night Shabbat service.The congregation called for peace and happiness, and they said they won't let what happened scare them away. "We're going to be here another 100 years," Atlas-Acuna said. "We're going to take the right precautions that we need to take in order to be safe. Maybe the reason was to wake everybody up and realize that there is that threat out there, and to bring everybody together, and I think the whole community is going to be that much more alert." If convicted, Holzer faces up to 50 years in prison. 2277

TAMPA, Fla — Amy Bottomley was raised in the suburbs of Chicago by two parents who loved her very much — a little girl who grew up and moved with her husband and son to Tampa.She says there’s always been a piece of her heart missing — and on Thursday, in front of Gate C inside Tampa International Airport, she was ready to find that missing piece.Bottomley had spent months talking on the phone with her birth mother, Kathleen Buchanan. They had connected after Bottomley got the results of a DNA test."I am feeling a mix of emotions right now,” Bottomley said as she sat in the seat and waited for her birth mom’s plane to land. “It’s going to be interesting.”Her hands were shaking, her heart was racing. She got a text that her birth mom's plane had landed. She’s been waiting for this moment, "My whole life, my entire life, 42 years.” 852
SACRAMENTO, Cali. – If you’ve ever wanted to experience life beyond the Earth’s atmosphere, you may get the chance in six years. A company has a goal to make space vacations a reality by 2025. Right now, The Gateway Foundation is developing the very first space hotel with artificial gravity. “So the Von Braun Space Station is going to be the first commercial space station with artificial gravity,” said Tim Alatorre, a senior design architect with the company. The Von Braun Rotating Space Station will basically be a space hotel for customers.“So, the station works like a bike tire, we’re going to have spokes coming out of the central hub. That’s where the spaceships will dock, zero gravity and then it rotates,” said Alatorre. “So, the rotation creates that artificial gravity on the perimeter – this is where people will be living on the outside edge.”Although artificial gravity sounds like something out of science fiction, Alatorre says the science is sound. Designers will be using technology from the International Space Station.“NASA built the space station with just a few tools, one of them is the mechanical arm that we often see in the videos,” said John Blinko, President of the Gateway Foundation. “It’s the arm that we want to adopt in our space construction and designs and schemes and so forth.”But all of this depends on Elon Musk and SpaceX’s launch system. “SpaceX is developing the Super Heavy and the Starship platform. Our projections are showing the price of tickets is going to get lower as time goes on. So for right now, it could be cost prohibitive for some, but in a few short years, it’s going to be a common thing people do. As soon as Starship is ready to launch and is orbital, we want to be one of the first customers to launch into orbit.”In 2025, Alatorre says people will be able to vacation to space. “So, the space station is going to be a big draw to people,” said Alatorre. “We’re going to have a hotel, restaurant, bar, gymnasium.”But it’s more than that. The foundation says it’s the first step to advancing beyond the atmosphere.“But big picture – we’re trying to build out a space industry,” said Alatorre. “We want to have multiple stations in space – space tourism going to the moon, going to Mars, going to other space stations. And just from a humanity standpoint, having hundreds of people being able to go up to space and look back on Earth and just know we are sharing this little blue marble. I think it’s going to have a profound impact on people.” 2522
SALISBURY, N.C. – A delivery truck driver is lucky to be alive after stopping to help a stranded motorist in North Carolina. The driver, Jeremiah Cribb, fell about 75 feet off the Yadkin River Bridge while trying to avoid getting hit by a tractor trailer in Salisbury."I keep having flashbacks,” 308
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