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A college football fan who held up a sign on national TV asking for beer money says he's giving the thousands of dollars he raked in to a children's hospital.And the cash is being tripled thanks to two companies announcing matching contributions.Carson King held a poster that said "Busch Light Supply Needs Replenished" on ESPN's "College GameDay" on Saturday morning.He scrawled his Venmo account details on the sign for the nation to see.The college football show was broadcasting from Ames, Iowa, ahead of the matchup between the Iowa Hawkeyes and the Iowa State Cyclones.King, a 24-year-old who attended Iowa State, told CNN he and his friends couldn't get close enough to the main "GameDay" stage, but positioned themselves near a secondary stage well in the view of TV cameras.After a little while, one of his friends asked him, "Who keeps texting you?"King looked at his phone and after less than 30 minutes of holding the sign, more than 0 worth of Venmo donations had already popped in to his account."After I got 0 I thought, 'There are better things I can do with this,'" he said.He spoke to his family and decided that, after the cost of paying for a case of Busch Light, he'd give the rest to the University of Iowa Stead Family Children's Hospital, he said.As of Tuesday evening, the amount he has received in his Venmo account had reached more than ,000.The children's hospital is next to the Hawkeyes' Kinnick Stadium. During each Iowa home game, fans traditionally do the "Iowa Wave" in tribute to the children who can watch the game unfold from the hospital windows.Busch Beer took notice, 1630
WALLOPS ISLAND, Va. – It is pretty to look at, but at times, treacherous to encounter: when snowstorms wreak havoc on the ground, it can come with a cost. Yet, because of limited research, snowstorms are not as well-understood as other weather phenomenon. That’s about to change. Inside a noisy hangar at NASA’s Wallops Island facility in Virginia sits a specially outfitted P-3 aircraft, also known as a “snow chaser.” “Snow can have a huge economic impact,” said Lynn McMurdie, principal investigator for a new research project called IMPACTS. “To be able to fly inside the clouds, where the snowflakes form, enables us to study the processes that go into forming the snowflakes that eventually fall down to the earth as snowfall in your backyard.” It’s all part of a five-year, million research project called IMPACTS, which stands for Investigation of Microphysics and Precipitation for Atlantic Coast-Threatening Snowstorms. The team is embarking on its first snowstorm chasing flights this month. “It gets a bit turbulent. The plane is very capable and has great de-icing systems,” said Gerrit Everson, chief of flight operations at Wallops Flight Facility and a NASA pilot. “We would never put our crew or our passengers or the scientists in an unsafe position. So, we do a very good job at mitigating the risk. But, yeah, you do have to be willing to accept a certain degree of turbulence and bumps here and there.” It’s been 30 years since there’s been a major study of snowstorms like this one. What researchers are hoping to find out this time around isn’t just where the snow is going to fall, but how intense that snowfall might be. “People think the forecasting is really easy and simple, but it's actually very complicated,” McMurdie said. “Hopefully, we will be doing a better job so we can help joe citizen know what to do when there is a storm threatening.” Beyond that, scientists hope to also learn how snowfall can impact the water supply all over the planet. “We need water to survive and we need to understand how the water goes through the whole earth system,” McMurdie said.It’s a global ecosystem where winter wonderlands play a crucial part. 2186

A federal agent was shot in an officer-involved shooting in northeast Baltimore Wednesday.A federal agent and a suspect were injured in the incident.The Bureau of Alcohol Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) 222
A man dropped off ,000 worth of toys to children in Harrisonburg, Virginia, on Saturday, continuing a tradition of providing toys for the community. According to NBC News, Adam Armstrong, a 35-year-old who said he grew up poor, drove a truckload of toys to Harris Gardens, a public housing complex in Harrisonburg. There, he was greeted by dozens of children and their families. These just weren't trinkets and candy canes. "He was giving away bikes, remote-controlled cars, real Barbie dolls, not Dollar Store Barbie dolls," property manager Sara Lewis-Weeks told NBC News. "He didn't miss anybody. His heart was truly in this."Lewis-Weeks compared the giveaway to when Oprah famously gave away cars to her entire audience. "They thought it was going to be a couple of stuffed animals, not, 'And you get a bike, and you get a bike, and you get a bike,' like an 'Oprah' for little kids," Lewis-Weeks told NBC News.Armstrong told NBC News that he felt blessed to be able to give children nice toys in time for Christmas."I remember Harrisonburg being a friendly small town," Armstrong said. "I remember government housing and a lot of poverty, crimes, drugs, violence and things of that nature. Every time I see kids, I know it's not their fault where they are."To read NBC 1288
A large meteor gave St. Louis a light show for the ages Monday night.Just before 9 p.m. local time, a large fireball lit up the sky above the city and surrounding areas. The 186
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