| From the Editor's Desk
How a Texas Housewife Got Away With Murderand Inspired a Miniseries It wasn't easy for the residents of 1980s-era Wylie, Texas to believe the gruesome details about Betty Gore's death. That was true especially for Candy Montgomery, a churchgoing housewife who couldn't quite believe that Gore had been gruesomely hacked to death in her own home. Even after Montgomery admitted to the murder.
See, despite that confessionâand the 41 axe wounds found on Gore's bodyâMontgomery was found not guilty of murdering her friend. According to her defense, she was only able to access the memory of Gore's killing through hypnosis (a form of testimony outlawed in 27 states), and purported her actions that day were carried out under a blind, uncontrollable rage and in self-defense, after Gore confronted Montgomery about her extramarital affair with Allan, Betty's husband.
Continued here
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WorkEU approves $8.7 billion of state aid for tech innovation projects BRUSSELS :The European Commission has approved 8.1 billion euros ($8.7 billion) of state aid for microelectronics and communication technology projects as part of the European Union's drive to be at the cutting edge of technological innovation.The EU executive said on Thursday that 14 member countries could p Work � | | WorkWorkThe NANOGrav 12.5-year Data Set: Bayesian Limits on Gravitational Waves from Individual Supermassive Black Hole Binaries Pulsar timing array collaborations, such as the North American NanohertzObservatory for Gravitational Waves (NANOGrav), are seeking to detect nanohertzgravitational waves emitted by supermassive black hole binaries formed in theaftermath of galaxy mergers. We have searched for continuous waves fromindividual circular supermassive black hole binaries using the NANOGrav'srecent 12.5-year data set. We created new methods to accurately model theuncertainties on pulsar distances in our analysis, and we implemented newtechniques to account for a common red noise process in pulsar timing arraydata sets while searching for deterministic gravitational wave signals,including continuous waves. As we found no evidence for continuous waves in ourdata, we placed 95\% upper limits on the strain amplitude of continuous wavesemitted by these sources. At our most sensitive frequency of 7.65 nanohertz, weplaced a sky-averaged limit of $h_0 < $ $(6.82 \pm 0.35) \times 10^{-15}$, and$h_0 <$ $(2.66 \pm 0.15) \times 10^{-15}$ in our most sensitive sky location.Finally, we placed a multi-messenger limit of $\mathcal{M} <$ $(1.41 \pm 0.02)\times 10^9 M_\odot$ on the chirp mass of the supermassive black hole binarycandidate 3C~66B. � | | WorkWork � | | WorkWork � | | WorkWork33% of company executives “very confident” to operate in public cloud: Report About 33% of executives are “very confident” in their ability to operate in a public cloud environment – an increase from 2022 when only 21% reported feeling very confident, a report has said. Data storage and management solutions provider NetApp has released 2023 State of CloudOps report that explores the current state of CloudOps and how IT decision makers feel about the ways their organisations are working to optimise their environments. � | | WorkPresident Biden to host largest Pride party in White House The president is also expected to announce new measures to help schools and LGBTQ kids navigate book bans, community centers fight threats and transgender youth access better care at the event, domestic policy adviser Neera Tanden said WorkWorkWork'I have been left with half a skull Kyle Stephenson, 32, punched Braden Stromberg, 27, in an unprovoked attack from behind causing him to smash his head on a street in Bosolver, Derbyshire, causing severe brain swelling WorkWorkWorkWorkWorkWorkWorkWorkWorkWorkPBS NewsHour PBS NewsHour is a public media news organization with a nightly hour-long television broadcast and a robust digital footprint across the web and social media. Anchored by managing editor Judy Woodruff, the NewsHour features the latest news, analysis, field reports from around the world, live studio interviews and discussions. For more than 45 years, millions have turned to PBS NewsHour for the solid, reliable reporting that has made it one of the most trusted news programs on television and online. |
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