å§Ñô¶«·½Ò½ÔºÄпÆÖÎÁÆÑôðô¿Ú±®·Ç³£ºÃ-¡¾å§Ñô¶«·½Ò½Ôº¡¿£¬å§Ñô¶«·½Ò½Ôº,å§Ñô¶«·½ÄпÆÒ½ÔºÊշѱãÒË,å§Ñô¶«·½ÄпÆÒ½ÔºÆÀ¼Û±È½ÏºÃ,å§Ñô¶«·½Ò½Ôº¿´ÑôðôºÃ²»,å§Ñô¶«·½ÄпÆÊշѱê×¼,å§Ñô¶«·½Ò½ÔºÄпƿ´ÔçйÊÕ·Ñ͸Ã÷,å§Ñô¶«·½ÄпÆÒ½ÔºÆÀ¼ÛºÜºÃ
¡¡¡¡å§Ñô¶«·½Ò½ÔºÄпÆÖÎÁÆÑôðô¿Ú±®·Ç³£ºÃå§Ñô¶«·½Ò½Ôº¿´ÄпƼ¼ÊõÏȽø,å§ÑôÊж«·½Ò½Ôº¼Û¸ñÆ«µÍ,å§Ñô¶«·½¸¾¿ÆÊÕ·ÑÓë·þÎñ,å§Ñô¶«·½¸¾¿Æ×¨¼ÒÔõôÑù,å§Ñô¶«·½Ò½ÔºÍøÂçÔ¤Ô¼,å§Ñô¶«·½¼Û¸ñÊշѵÍ,å§Ñô¶«·½ÄпÆÒ½Ôº¸î°üƤרҵÂð
¡¡¡¡STUART, Fla. - A Martin County woman is turning 90 years old this week and got a huge surprise to help her celebrate the milestone.She has some of the best stories you'll hear, and her impact on the community makes her a treasured part of Martin County's history.Evelyn Deggeller thought she was going to a formal event at a SkyBlue Jet Aviation hangar at Witham Field Thursday, but her friend, Suzanne Deuser, had a big surprise planned.Deggeller, who once owned a plane and has a pilot's license, was treated to an hour-long flight from SkyBlue Jet Aviation to Jupiter and back.When she landed, a brass band was waiting for her, along with friends, family and city and county leaders."This is all for you," Deuser told Deggeller. "I sure did not expect this," Deggeller said.Deggeller has lived a story-book worthy life that has been centered around bringing other people joy.She and her father performed magic as a traveling duo across the country. WPTV Evelyn Deggeller of Stuart used to travel across the U.S. performing magic with her father and owned exotic animals. "I did what they call stage magic. No cards, nothing up close. It was all big pieces that were on stage," Deggeller said.She recalled pulling live rabbits out of hats."The best thing I do now is making money disappear," she laughed.She owned a chimpanzee and an elephant named Dixie, who gave her a lot of laughs. One time, she said Dixie was caught eating the neighbor's flowers. She could grab Dixie by the ear and walk her home.But her local claim to fame came in 1959 when she helped re-start the Martin County fair."The fair had been on before, but the war came, and everything was changed. After the war, they wanted to start up again," Deggeller said.She was just the woman to do it.Deggeller built a career supplying county and state fairs with rides and attractions and food stands.She has also been a part of charitable service organizations in Stuart, including Soroptimist International of Stuart.She holds keys to numerous cities, and Stuart Vice Mayor Eula Clarke presented her Thursday with Stuart's key to the city."I've enjoyed everything that I've been fortunate enough to do," Deggeller said.The celebration was just one more memory to take with her into her next decade."I'm shooting for 100. I don't know if I'll make it anyway, but I'm shooting for 100," Deggeller said.She says she has lived her life by "going with the flow."Of all of her experiences, she said her best years were the ones spent with her husband of more than 50 years.This story was first reported by Meghan McRoberts at WPTV in West Palm Beach, Florida. 2668
¡¡¡¡The 2017 World Series is one for the ages and it seems as though every game was decided by the smallest of margins ¨C that's why one gambler's undefeated record is amazing.The mystery gambler was discovered by Pregame.com's R.J. Bell and Bell has been following his earnings from the start.After Game 5 of the World Series, attention picked up around the large amounts of money the gambler was laying down at sports books. 429
¡¡¡¡TERRE HAUTE, Ind. (AP) ¡ª A man who killed a Kansas girl more than two decades ago has been executed in Indiana.Keith Nelson became the fifth federal inmate put to death this year and second this week.Nelson received a lethal injection Friday at the federal prison in Terre Haute, Indiana, after a higher court tossed a ruling that would have required the government to get a prescription for the drug used to kill him.Questions about whether the drug pentobarbital causes pain prior to death had been a focus of appeals.Nelson grabbed 10-year-old Pamela Butler off the street on Oct. 12, 1999, as part of a plan to find a female to rape and kill. 654
¡¡¡¡Swiss authorities are investigating a series of bizarre deposits.Investigators in Geneva are trying to understand why two Spanish women flushed roughly €100,000 (0,000) down toilets at a UBS bank branch and three nearby restaurants.Vincent Derouand of the Geneva Prosecutors' Office said the first incident involving cut-up €500 bills occurred in May.Security camera footage led investigators to the two Spanish women. Derouand said that a lawyer for the women confirmed the cash belonged to them."It may be illegal [cash] and they tried to get rid of it," Derouand said. "We have to check where the money is coming from."Derouand declined to identify the women."This is a strange story," he said. "It does not happen often."UBS declined to comment on the cash found at the Geneva branch, citing the ongoing investigation.The European Central Bank plans to kill off the €500 note next year because of concerns that it "could facilitate illicit activities."Europe's top law enforcement agency says the note (worth about 0) is often used by money launderers because of its unusually large denomination and portability. Plus, using cash helps criminals keep transactions and savings anonymous.In a 2015 report, Europol said cash was still the "instrument of choice" for terrorists and €500 bills were in high demand.Switzerland was long known for banking privacy laws that made it possible for banks to refuse to hand over their customers' data to authorities.But in recent years the country has agreed to start sharing financial information with outsiders, including the European Union and the U.S. 1610
¡¡¡¡Surveillance video was released Wednesday from security cameras outside Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School on the day a gunman killed 17 people.The video's expected July 27 release was delayed when the Broward County School Board requested a review by the state's highest court. On Wednesday, the state Supreme Court said no further appeals would be considered.The video only shows footage from exterior cameras on campus, not from inside the school building where former student Nikolas Cruz opened fire on students and faculty February 14.The heavily-edited and blurred footage depicts the chaotic moments after the shooting, with students and staff being directed away from the scene and law enforcement officers at one point opening a gate and entering a school building with their guns drawn. 807