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SUTHERLAND SPRINGS, Texas (KGTV) -- At least 26 people are dead and dozens more injured after a shooting at a church in Texas Sunday morning, according to ABC News.KSAT identified the shooter as Devin Kelley of New Braunfels, Tex. He reportedly fled the scene and is dead after a brief pursuit. ABC News reported Kelley has no known ties to terrorism.The shooting took place at First Baptist Church in Sutherland Springs, which is located about 35 miles east of San Antonio, according to ABC affiliate KSAT.RELATED: Who is Devin Kelley, Texas church suspect?A witness reported seeing a man walk into the church around 11:30 a.m. and open fire.The victims ranged from 5 to 72 years old. Among them is 14-year-old Annabelle Renee Pomeroy according to her father, Frank Pomeroy, who is a pastor at the church.At least six helicopters were on scene to transport victims. Watch a Facebook Live from the scene by clicking play below: 956
¡¡¡¡TERRE HAUTE, Ind. -- A Terre Haute police officer who died following an exchange of gunfire with a homicide suspect Friday night has been identified as Patrolman Rob Pitts, a 16-year veteran of the force.Pitts and three other officers with the Terre Haute Police Department were looking for a potential homicide suspect Friday afternoon at the Garden Quarter apartment complex.State police say the suspect started shooting at the officers from the second floor of an apartment building and the officers returned fire. Patrolman Pitts was wounded and later died at Terre Haute Regional hospital.The suspect was located around 9:15 p.m. when members of the Terre Haute Police Department SWAT team entered the apartment building.He also died from his wounds. His name has not been released. 835
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The banana phone is back.A startup that licenses the Nokia phone brand has unveiled a new version of the 8110, a curved mobile phone that was first released in 1996 and featured in "The Matrix."The phone, which is offered in banana yellow and black, will sell for €79 (). It comes loaded with a new version of the game Snake, Finnish startup HMD said in a statement."This is a return to the glory years of Nokia," said Ian Fogg, senior analyst at IHS Markit. "But it also includes all the new technology."The 8110 comes with 4G, and a handful of apps including Google Maps, Facebook and Twitter. But it doesn't have a flashy operating system and users won't be able to download other popular apps.Fogg said that basic -- or "feature" -- phones are appealing because they are reliable, and can run for a long time on a single charge. The 8110 goes 25 days in standby mode, for example.Nokia used to be the world's largest maker of mobile phones, but it struggled to adapt to the era of smartphones and compete with the likes of Apple and Samsung.Microsoft purchased the company's handset business in 2013, but later unwound the deal. Nokia now focuses on making technology for telecommunications networks.HMD, which has licensed the Nokia brand since 2016, sold over 70 million handsets in 2017, according to IHS. That puts its sales, on an annualized basis, in the same league as Sony and Lenovo."HMD's strategy clearly aims to return Nokia to be a mobile market leader, even if it's too early for HMD to realistically target displacing Samsung or Apple," Fogg said.Nokia marketed the original 8110 as "the first of its kind in terms of its ergonomics." Its battery lasted up to six days, and it was able to store 16 ring tones and up to 324 names and numbers."It feels good in the hand and fits into any pocket. The revolutionary curved design fits the natural shape of your face," the company said in a press release at the time. 1948
¡¡¡¡The "City by the Bay" is known for more than a few things. Treacherous hills, cable cars, golden bridges and¡Sourdough bread, which is San Francisco¡¯s not so well-kept secret for at least the last 150 years, if not longer. Just ask Jen Latham.¡°The Basque country, which is that region kind of in between France and Spain, has an amazing tradition of this exact style of bread, like that very crusty, very wet, very open crumb bread. And during the gold rush and just after the gold rush, there was this huge influx of Basque people to the to this area. They brought that tradition of bread here,¡± said Latham.Latham is the head of Bread at Tartine Bakery in San Francisco.Ever since San Francisco boomed in the mid 1800¡¯s with the gold rush, the city has been a haven for the sour bakers. The tradition is alive and well at Tartine.What makes sourdough different than other bread? It¡¯s this little thing called a starter.¡°It¡¯s a paste of flour and water that¡¯s inoculated with the right balance of yeast and bacteria to raise dough,¡± said Latham.Yup just mix a little flour and water and let it collect the natural bacteria in the air and you too can have your very own sourdough starter. And since the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic people have.People at home have been making, feeding, and nurturing their own starter at home.¡°Hopped on the bandwagon during COVID, just like millions of people probably did. Kind of found some blogs and started from there but it¡¯s been going since like April,¡± said TC Jamison, a home baker.Jamison started his starter six month ago when the lockdowns were in full swing. He¡¯s been baking and feeding it ever since.¡°You¡¯re dealing with something that¡¯s alive, so it¡¯s going to be different every time,¡± said Jamison.Yup, feeding it fresh flour and water every day, for six months. It¡¯s a lot of work.¡°The starter has been going, the one that we use now for well over 20 years,¡± Latham explained.So Jamison has a little ways to go. Some bakeries in San Francisco have had an ongoing starter for more than 150 years.But Jamison has a pretty special goal for his starter."My daughter was born in June. I was pretty hell bent on keeping the starter going before she was born and then afterwards. So now I can always say, that¡¯s been around since before you were born,¡± he said. That will go down in the dad joke hall of fame.At Tartine, they¡¯ll continue to shape, fold, and flour their way into the fabric of San Francisco sourdough history.¡°You¡¯re never done learning about bread. There¡¯s always more to learn. There¡¯s always things you can change, there¡¯s infinite variables. The flour and the weather and you¡¯re fermentation management, timing, temperature. You¡¯re never done,¡± said Latham 2732
¡¡¡¡TENINO, Wash. ¨C George Washington¡¯s face may be on U.S. currency, but never on money quite like this.¡°We've created our own,¡± said Wayne Fournier, mayor of Tenino, Washington.It¡¯s a town of about 2,000 people, halfway between Seattle and Portland. Using a printing press from the 19th century, Tenino is now printing its own form of currency, made of thin pieces of wood.¡°We're growing money on trees here,¡± Mayor Fournier said. ¡°Literally.¡±It¡¯s called ¡°complimentary currency¡± or ¡°scrip.¡± Here¡¯s how it works: using ,000 from the general fund, the city is backing the wooden notes, 400 of them in all, and giving them to town residents in need.¡°We issue it out to people that have been affected by the pandemic and qualify financially,¡± Mayor Fournier said. ¡°They can receive up to 0 a month.¡±In turn, people can spend the wooden money, but only in town, at businesses that signed up to participate in the program. Those businesses can then redeem the wooden money back at City Hall for real U.S. dollars.¡°I thought it was a really good idea,¡± said Juan Martinez, of Don Juan¡¯s Mexican Kitchen in Tenino.The restaurant has been around for eight years, but the pandemic affected its bottom line and that of people in town, too. So far, though, the wooden money is getting around.¡°I've had quite a few people come in and, you know, they hadn't gone out to dinner in a while because they were laid off of work,¡± Martinez said, ¡°and when they got it, had a few people come in and enjoy lunch with their families and were able to pay with the wooden money.¡±It¡¯s a currency circulation that the mayor wants to keep going.¡°The whole idea is just to keep money bouncing around the community,¡± he said.The town has done this before, back in the 1930s, during the Great Depression.¡°It was a big hit and it saved the city at the time,¡± Mayor Fournier said.It¡¯s an old lifeline they hope will keep working again in a new era.City leaders say they have been fielding calls from as far away as Spain, New Zealand and Japan from people interested in their wooden money. They say, so far, the U.S. Treasury Department has not contacted them about their wooden money program. 2177
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