TIL Cincinnati has an abandoned subway system that is probably creepy as fuck https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cincinnati_Subway
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leonarda_Cianciulli An Italian serial killer disposed of the bodies by turning them into soap and teacakes.
http://www.indiatimes.com/news/worl...-no-mosquitoes-we-are-not-kidding-264804.html Iceland is the only country without mosquitoes.
they definitely still have it for basketball. we used it this year to play at hawaii on the way to the maui tournament:
TIL about the nuclear football http://www.seattletimes.com/nation-world/nuclear-halfbacks-carry-the-ball-for-the-president/
believe bama did this when they were on probation and got a bowl ban, others can correct with details.
Harambe-shaped food is worth hundreds of thousands of dollars http://www.wltx.com/mb/ext/news/nat...-on-ebay/101/nationnow/47cDQS9lckacGQaEmAsG4E
That 9 nuclear subs have sank and the only civilian vessel that uses nuclear power is one of the polar ice breaker cruise liners.
But only in the wild. One of the reasons their numbers still remain so low in spite of heavy conservation efforts is that the are very reluctant to mate in captivity.
The singer of Offspring has a PhD in molecular biology and is working on HIV cures Spoiler Holland attended Pacifica High School in Garden Grove, California, where he graduated as class valedictorian in 1984. During high school, Holland was the best student in mathematics in his year, and he found it "just as exciting as punk rock."[4] He then attended the University of Southern California, where he earned a B.S. degree in biology and an M.S. degree in molecular biology, and was a candidate for a Ph.D. in molecular biology.[5]However, after the success of The Offspring, he suspended his candidature to focus on music. In an interview in 1995, Holland had said when he turns 40, he would rather be a professor at a university than play music.[4] Holland was a doctoral student at the Laboratory of Viral Oncology and Proteomics Research, Keck School of Medicine, where he was supervised by Professor Suraiya Rasheed.[6] In March 2013, Holland and co-authors published a paper in PLoS One regarding microRNA in HIV genomes,[7] titled "Identification of Human MicroRNA-Like Sequences Embedded within the Protein-Encoding Genes of the Human Immunodeficiency Virus".[8] The original academic paper describes the use of computational molecular biological (in silico) approaches to identify microRNA-like sequences in HIV. These sequences are suggested to have evolved to self-regulate survival of the virus in the host by evading its immune responses and thus influence the persistence, replication, and pathogenicity of HIV. Holland was awarded his Ph.D. degree in molecular biology during the USC Commencement on May 12, 2017.[9][10]