| 10 things you need to know today | | | | | | | 4.French climber rescued, Polish partner out of reach on 'Killer Mountain' | An elite team of Polish mountain climbers rescued a French climber, Elisabeth Revol, on Sunday from Pakistan's Nanga Parbata, a Himalayan peak also known as "Killer Mountain." Harsh weather conditions on the mountain, the ninth highest in the world, prevented the rescuers from trying to get to Revol's climbing partner, Tomek Mackiewicz of Poland, who was stricken with acute mountain sickness caused by the lack of oxygen at high altitude. He also was suffering from snow blindness and frostbite. Revol had left him sheltered in a tent to descend on her own and get help. The two are believed to have reached the 26,600-foot summit, which would make them the second team ever to make it in the treacherous winter season. [The New York Times] | | | 6.Police: Jealous gunman kills 4 outside Pennsylvania car wash | A man armed with an AR-15 assault-style rifle and two other guns shot and killed four people outside a Pennsylvania car wash early Sunday. The alleged attacker, Tim Smith, apparently shot himself after the killings, and is not expected to survive. Police said the gunman was driven by jealousy, having broken up with one of the victims, 25-year-old Chelsie Cline, days earlier. She was having an affair with another victim, Will Porterfield, 27. "I was told my husband was cheating on me with (one of the victims), and that she had broken up with her previous boyfriend two days ago, and he went crazy and shot them all," said Porterfield's wife, Jenna Porterfield, 24. [Post-Gazette] | | | | | 10.Beetle Bailey creator Mort Walker dies at 94 | Mort Walker, the comic strip artist who created Beetle Bailey, died over the weekend at his home in Stamford, Connecticut. He was 94. Walker drew the strip, about a loafing Army private, for 68 years, the longest such daily run ever, according to syndicator King Features. Beetle Bailey originally was a slow-moving college student named Spider, but Walker turned him into an Army private with the onset of the Korean War. The Tokyo edition of Stars & Stripes banned the strip for fear it would encourage real service members to become slackers, but that only gave it free publicity that sent circulation soaring. In the 1970s, Walker added a black character, Lt. Flap, stoking the strip's popularity again. His sons plan to continue the comic. [NPR] | | | | MOST POPULAR | | | CAPTURED: A PHOTO BLOG | Kelly Gonsalves | | | | | Is this email not displaying correctly? View it in your browser. Unsubscribe from this list | Update subscription preferences | Privacy Policy © 2015 THE WEEK PUBLICATIONS, INC. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. THE WEEK ® IS A REGISTERED TRADEMARK OWNED BY FELIX DENNIS. | | |
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