
911 calls reveal terror of July 4 floods as those trapped in attics and camp cabins beg for help
A man clinging to a tree on the Guadalupe River and screaming for a helicopter rescue. A father hustling his family into the attic to escape the rising waters. A Camp Mystic staffer pleading with a 911 operator to send help immediately. Five months after catastrophic flooding killed more than 100 people in a single hard-hit county in the Texas Hill Country, hundreds of 911 audio files released Friday give a new glimpse into the terror and panic that surrounded the July 4 floods. Here are the a...
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- 911 calls reveal terror of July 4 floods as those trapped in attics and camp cabins beg for help
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- High school student, 18, charged with arson in fire that burned New York City subway passenger
- Suspect in DC pipe bomb case was 'disappointed' after Trump lost 2020 election, prosecutor says
- Education Department workers targeted in layoffs are returning to tackle civil rights backlog
Suspect in DC pipe bomb case was 'disappointed' after Trump lost 2020 election, prosecutor says
WASHINGTON (AP) — The man accused of planting a pair of pipe bombs outside the headquarters of the Republican and Democratic national parties in Washington on the eve of the U. S. Capitol attack told investigators he was “disappointed” in the outcome of the 2020 presidential election lost by President Donald Trump, the top federal prosecutor for the nation's capital said Friday. U. S. Attorney Jeanine Pirro told ABC News Live that she believes it is “unmistakable” that Brian Cole Jr...
Read MorePolitics
- Suspect in DC pipe bomb case was 'disappointed' after Trump lost 2020 election, prosecutor says
- Education Department workers targeted in layoffs are returning to tackle civil rights backlog
- FAA launches investigation into US airlines over flight cuts ordered during the shutdown
- Vanity Fair parts ways with Olivia Nuzzi amid Robert F. Kennedy Jr. controversy
- Redistricting forced a California GOP congressman to weigh a Texas move. He tells AP why hes not
A brown pelican 'feeding frenzy' is an encouraging sign for the often-struggling large seabirds
MORRO BAY, Calif. (AP) — On a jagged coastline in Central California, brown pelicans gather on rock promontories, packed in like edgy commuters as they take flight to feed on a vast school of fish just offshore. The water churns in whitecaps as the big-billed birds plunge beneath the surface in search of northern anchovies, Pacific sardines and mackerel. If awkward and wobbly in appearance on land, they are graceful once airborne. The signature pouch dangling beneath the lower bill can scoop...
Read MoreScience News
- A brown pelican 'feeding frenzy' is an encouraging sign for the often-struggling large seabirds
- A dozen former FDA leaders lambaste claims by the agency's current vaccine chief
- Renowned astronomers push to protect Chile's cherished night sky from an industrial project
- Billionaire spacewalker is back before the Senate seeking NASA's top job
- Researchers slightly lower study's estimate of drop in global income due to climate change

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