Tag Archives: house

Puppy prints and wall illusions found in 1,500-year-old house in Turkey

Archaeologists have discovered a fantastical-looking, 1,500-year-old house in Turkey that was decorated with illusory wall paintings and terracotta tiles on the floor with puppy prints and possible chicken decorations pressed into them.

The house may have been used by people involved with the military, the researchers noted.

“The tiles preserved the paw prints of puppies and in one rare case the hoof print of a goat,” Frances Gallart Marqués, a former curatorial fellow at the Harvard Art Museums, said Jan. 6 during a presentation at the virtual joint annual meeting of the Archaeological Institute of America (AIA) and the Society for Classical Studies (SCS). 

Related: 24 amazing archaeological discoveries 

Excavator Lauren DiSalvo and other researchers discovered a dog paw print on one of the house’s terracotta floor tiles. (Image credit: Archaeological Exploration of Sardis/President and Fellows of Harvard College)

The animals likely walked on the tiles while they were drying out prior to firing, the researchers said. Drawings depicting what may be chickens or ducks were also found on the floor tiles; “these were finger-drawn before the tiles were fired,” Gallart Marqués said.

If the floor tiles were left visible, and not covered up by a carpet, the paw prints and possible chicken decorations would have gone well with the “fanciful” style of the house’s wall paintings, the researchers told Live Science. The wall paintings are painted on plaster and mimic draped curtains and polychrome marble, Vanessa Rousseau, an adjunct professor of art history at the University of St. Thomas in St. Paul, Minnesota, said at the virtual meeting. 

The mix of colors and illusions in the paintings combined with the possible chicken decorations on the floor as well as light coming through the windows may have created a fantastic look. One could imagine being “surrounded by the somewhat surreal fakery of painted marble and drapery” with light coming through the windows and “shining on those birds’ marks on the terracotta floor,” Rousseau said during her presentation. 

A bird/chicken was carved into a terracotta floor tile prior to firing. (Image credit: Archaeological Exploration of Sardis/President and Fellows of Harvard College)

While the paintings and puppy prints may be playful, five longswords found in the house raise the question as to whether the inhabitants were involved in warfare. The longswords are “spathae,” which are straight swords used by the ancient Romans whose length was usually greater than 20 inches (50 centimeters). 

Related: The coolest ancient weapons discovered in 2020

Given that only three other swords of any kind have been found in the excavated parts of Sardis, the discovery of five longswords in this one house is remarkable, the researchers told Live Science. In addition to the longswords, archaeologists also found buckles with designs that suggest they were worn by members of the military, and a lead seal that could have been used to stamp official documents. These finds, together with the house’s central location in Sardis, suggest the people in the house were part of the city’s military or civil authority, the researchers said. 

The house was in use for more than 200 years before an earthquake destroyed it during the early seventh century.  Excavation by the Sardis Expedition of Harvard University is being conducted with the permission of the Turkish government, and is directed by Professor Nicholas Cahill of the University of Wisconsin–Madison. 

Originally published on Live Science.

Read original article here

Impeachment: Democratic House staffers draft letter asking senators to convict Trump ‘for our sake, and the sake of the country’

“We are staff who work for members of the U.S. House of Representatives, where it is our honor and privilege to serve our country and our fellow Americans. But on January 6th, 2021, our workplace was attacked by a violent mob trying to stop the Electoral College vote count,” the draft of the letter reads.

In an effort to make the letter appeal to Republican staffers as well, its drafters organized the signatures so staffers can sign on with just their email addresses, leaving off the offices of the members of Congress they work for.

The letter squarely blames former President Donald Trump for inciting the attack.

“As employees of the U.S. House of Representatives, we don’t have a vote on whether to convict Donald J. Trump for his role in inciting the violent attack at the Capitol, but our Senators do. And for our sake, and the sake of the country, we ask that they vote to convict the former president and bar him from ever holding office again,” the letter states.

A staffer familiar with the drafting of the letter told CNN that signatures are still being collected and when the letter will be sent to the Senate is undetermined.

“No one should have to experience something like this in their place of work,” the staffer told CNN. “And I think it’s important to tell this part of the story, because it’s not just members of Congress who come to work at the Capitol every day. And it’s not just staffers who work at the Capitol who were traumatized by what happened. And I think that is a piece of it. The trauma is there; the trauma is very real. And anytime that new pieces of information come out, you know, you’re kind of re-traumatized.”

The letter, which started circulating Wednesday morning, already had more than 100 signatures as of Wednesday night. Staffers involved with the letter are keeping the timetable of when it will be sent to the Senate open to ensure that anyone who wants to add their name is able to, the staffer familiar with the drafting tells CNN.

“It’s taken off,” the staffer said when asked to give a ballpark estimate of how many signatures would end up on the letter.

Read original article here

Donovan Mitchell says he’s ‘honored’ the Utah House of Representatives would pass a resolution for him

SALT LAKE CITY — Donovan Mitchell didn’t really know what to think when he heard the news. The Utah House of Representatives had passed a resolution in honor of him? Why? And what exactly did that mean?

When House Resolution 3 was introduced by Rep. Kera Birkeland, R-Morgan on Tuesday to recognize “the exemplary service of Donovan Mitchell to the Utah Jazz and the Utah community; and suggests consideration of making the ‘Spida’ (Mitchell’s nickname) the official state arachnid” it caused some people to raise their eyebrows.

The resolution was drafted after Mitchell’s now infamous postgame exchange with Shaquille O’Neal last week. It was a way of backing up the Jazz star.

“In Utah, we support our players when they face awkward abuse during postgame interviews disguised as pep talks,” the resolution states while also getting in some jabs at O’Neal’s free throw percentage and off the court ventures like movie “Kazaam” and the video game “Shaq Fu.”

“I think it is appropriate for the great state of Utah to award Shaquille O’Neal with a technical foul,” said Birkeland, sporting a ref jersey.

That little bit of detail was something Mitchell appreciated.

“That was pretty fun,” Mitchell said.

Birkeland and her fellow representatives passed the resolution in a landslide 67-5 vote. No surprise that Utahns support one of their biggest stars.

The resolution, though, did face some opposition.

“Not only has he gotten into the head of Donovan Mitchell, but I’m sure everyone who votes yes on this, he would rent some space in your head, as well,” House Majority Leader Francis Gibson, R-Mapleton, said about O’Neale. “But I do support our Jazz. I do support Donovan Mitchell.”

Now, whether or not such a matter should have been brought to the house floor — House Speaker Brad Wilson even sported a Mitchell jersey for the discussion — is a whole other matter. But Birkeland and the other representatives voting yes, simply wanted to cast an official show of support for the All-Star.

And as Mitchell sat in his car reading about it and pondering about the unique show of support, he couldn’t help but smile. Sure it was easy to laugh at, but it also was pretty moving.

“I looked at it in a different light,” Mitchell said. “Growing up being a kid you always want to be that guy that’s beloved and I really appreciate the support. I think it’s special and it’s an honor. It’s kind of funny.”

But he did have a question: “Is it like the state spider?” Mitchell asked. “I don’t know how that works, to be honest with you. I was asking around, we don’t really know.”

It doesn’t appear to be. The Utah State Legislature website states that resolutions “are considered an expression of the Legislature and are printed in the annual session laws (Laws of Utah) but are not codified.”

So for now, it’s just a way for the house to have expressed an opinion. The opinion that Mitchell is the best player — and spider — around.

“I’m just blessed that people think of me that way,” Mitchell said. “I’m just honored.”

Ryan Miller

More stories you may be interested in

Read original article here

Schumer says House will deliver Trump impeachment article to Senate on Monday

Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) displays a signed an article of impeachment against President Donald Trump at the U.S. Capitol on January 13, 2021 in Washington, DC.

Stefani Reynolds | Getty Images

The House will deliver the impeachment article against former President Donald Trump to the Senate on Monday, Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer said Friday.

The action will start the process for the second trial the ex-president has faced for charges of high crimes and misdemeanors. While Trump has already left the White House, the Senate can vote to bar him from holding office again if it chooses to convict him.

The House earlier this month charged Trump with inciting an insurrection against the government by inflaming a mob that overran the Capitol on Jan. 6. The riot, which disrupted Congress’ count of President Joe Biden’s electoral win, left five dead, including a Capitol police officer.

The Senate will need 67 votes to convict Trump. If all 50 Democrats support conviction, they will need 17 Republicans to join them.

Speaking after Schumer, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., expressed concerns that Trump would not have enough time to mount a defense. He had asked the House to send the article on Thursday to ensure “a full and fair process.”

Trump has hired South Carolina attorney Butch Bowers to defend him during the trial. The nine impeachment managers who will make the House’s case are Democratic Reps. Jamie Raskin of Maryland, Diana DeGette of Colorado, David Cicilline of Rhode Island, Joaquin Castro of Texas, Eric Swalwell and Ted Lieu of California, Stacey Plaskett, the delegate for the U.S. Virgin Islands, Madeleine Dean of Pennsylvania and Joe Neguse of Colorado.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, who would not say Thursday when her chamber would transmit the article to the Senate, argued the managers would not need to prepare as much evidence for the second trial as they did for the first last year.

“This year, the whole world bore witness to the president’s incitement, to the execution of his call to action, and the violence that was used,” the California Democrat told reporters Thursday.

Schumer said he has spoken to McConnell about “the timing and duration of the trial,” but did not give any details about how long it will last. The Democratic leader aims to balance impeachment with confirmation of Biden’s Cabinet members and passage of a coronavirus relief bill.

“The Senate must and will do all three,” he said Friday.

The first trial Trump faced last year for charges of abuse of power and obstruction of Congress lasted about three weeks. The Republican-held Senate acquitted him.

Schumer downplayed GOP concerns that Democrats would rush through the trial after a rushed process in the House, which impeached Trump only a week after the insurrection.

“It will be a full trial. It will be a fair trial,” he said.

McConnell has not indicated whether he will vote to convict Trump. On Tuesday, he said the rioters “were provoked by the president and other powerful people.”

Republican Sens. Lisa Murkowski of Alaska and Pat Toomey of Pennsylvania both called on Trump to resign while he still held office. Neither has said how they plan to vote on conviction.

Murkowski said in a statement earlier this month that the House responded to the Capitol attack “swiftly, and I believe, appropriately, with impeachment.”

Subscribe to CNBC on YouTube.

Read original article here

Capitol Police investigating after congressman discovered carrying a gun when attempting to go on the House floor

Rep. Andy Harris, of Maryland, set off a metal detector outside the House floor on Thursday and an officer soon discovered it was because he was carrying a concealed gun on his side, a Capitol official told CNN. The officer sent Harris away, prompting him to ask fellow Republican Rep. John Katko, of New York, to hold his weapon.

According to a press pool report, Katko refused to hold the gun for Harris, saying that he did not have a license. Harris then left the area and returned moments later, walking onto the House floor without setting off the magnetometer.

The Capitol official confirmed to CNN that Harris did not enter the House floor with a weapon. Harris’ office did not immediately return a request for comment.

The Capitol Police officer who saw the gun informed his superiors and the department is investigating the matter, a Capitol Police source familiar with the matter told CNN.

Firearms are banned from Congress except for members, who are granted certain exemptions under a 1967 regulation from the Capitol Police Board, a source confirmed to CNN. Members of Congress are able to carry firearms in the halls of Congress and on Capitol grounds as long as they have Washington licenses and they carry ammunition separately, the source added. Under no circumstances are lawmakers allowed to bring firearms onto the House floor.

Democratic Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, of New York, told CNN’s Chris Cuomo on Thursday night that “I think a very considerable amount, a lot of members” of the House “still don’t yet feel safe around other members of Congress,” slamming Harris for the incident.

“The moment you bring a gun onto the House floor in violation of rules, you put everyone around you in danger. It is irresponsible, it is reckless, but beyond that it is the violation of rules,” she said.

“You are openly disobeying the rules that we have established as a community, which means that you cannot be trusted to be held accountable to what we’ve decided as a community. And so I don’t really care what they say their intentions are, I care what the impact of their actions are, and the impact is to put all 435 members of Congress in danger.”

Ocasio-Cortez asserted that Harris “tried to hand off his gun to another member who didn’t have a license, and any responsible gun owner knows that you don’t just hand off your gun to another individual, you have to clear it, et cetera.”

“That just goes to show, it doesn’t matter what your intention is if you are irresponsible, if you are trying to break rules, if you’re trying to sneak a firearm onto the floor of the House,” she added. “I don’t care if you accidentally set it off, I don’t care if you intentionally set it off, I don’t care if you don’t set it off at all, you are endangering the lives of members of Congress. And it is absolutely outrageous that we even have to have this conversation.”

The metal detectors were installed last week in the wake of the insurrection at the Capitol on January 6, which left five dead, including a Capitol Police officer. While lawmakers from both parties have been annoyed by the long lines the detectors have created during votes, Republicans in particular have complained vociferously and, in some cases, ignored them.

The metal detectors were installed after multiple House Democrats told CNN they were worried about some of their Republican colleagues and after multiple conversations about the need for every member of Congress and their guests to start going through metal detectors, CNN previously reported.

Since the detectors were installed, there have been very few votes on the House floor, so members are still getting used to the new measures.

Republican Rep. Lauren Boebert of Colorado, who filmed a campaign advertisement vowing to carry her handgun around Capitol Hill prior to arriving in Washington, was also involved in a standoff with Capitol Police at the newly installed metal detectors when trying to get on the floor January 12.

On that same night, GOP Reps. Markwayne Mullin of Oklahoma and Steve Womack of Arkansas yelled at Capitol Police when they were forced to go through the detectors. Womack shouted, “I was physically restrained,” and Mullin said, “It’s my constitutional right” to walk through and “they cannot stop me.”

Freedom Caucus Chair Andy Biggs, an Arizona Republican, told reporters on January 12, as he passed through the metal detectors to get to the House floor, “This is crap right here. You can put that down. This is the stupidest thing.”

Even some Democrats have been unhappy with the extra security because it has led to longer lines and members being forced to be within 6 feet of one another.

“I’m more likely to die of Covid because I got it from a colleague than I am to die because a colleague shoots me,” Rep. Filemon Vela, a Texas Democrat, told CNN last week.

After the initial criticism from lawmakers, and reports that some refused to stop for Capitol Police after setting off the magnetometers, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi proposed a new rule on January 13, imposing stiff fines on members who refused to follow the new security measures: $5,000 for the first offense and $10,000 for the second offense. The new rule has not been passed yet and will be considered when floor votes resume in the House in February.

CNN’s Caroline Kelly contributed to this report.

Read original article here

Breath Of The Wild Mod Makes Link’s House Suck Less

Image: Nintendo / Waikuteru

Much like his fellow millennials (who may or may not also technically be over 100 years old due to Calamity-induced death sleeps), Breath of the Wild’s Link dreams of home ownership. Unlike the rest of us, he can actually achieve that goal. There’s just one problem: The house is bad. Between the initial purchase and upgrades, it costs 4,400 rupees, and it ends up being little more than a glorified storage unit. Thank goodness for a new mod that spruces the place up a bit.

Modder Waikuteru’s “House Enhancements” mod does exactly what it says on the tin, adding a stable, a fishing pond, a cooking nook, a better bed that grants you additional hearts when you wake up, and your very own cucco buddy from whom you can extract eggs. There are also fun new decorations, including concept art on the walls, and you can access it any time with a custom warp point (which, in a clever twist, automatically banishes bad weather any time you use it).

“This mod re-imagines owning a house in BotW to make it a worthwhile purchase—something you’ll want to use regularly—all the while, retaining the original game feel and balance of the game,” Waikuteru wrote in a video description on YouTube.

It’s a solid start—functionality that, frankly, should have been in the game from the get-go. That said, I will not rest until I’m able to tame every dog in Hyrule, at which point they will take up residence in the fields around my house and live in a state of perpetual bliss. If modders can’t do this, then consider it a demand for Breath of the Wild 2. Failing that, at least let me pet them!

Recommended Stories

Read original article here

Winston Churchill bust and the White House

Overheated, confusing and laden in the end with blatant racism, the case of the White House bust of Winston Churchill still persists.

An Oval Office redesign brought in new busts instead: Latino civil rights leader Cesar Chavez, Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., Robert F. Kennedy, Rosa Parks and Eleanor Roosevelt.

In another era, the same decision caused outcry. American conservatives and even some British politicians declared it a major snub.

Mike Huckabee, the former Arkansas governor, said it was because President Barack Obama “probably grew up hearing that the British were a bunch of imperialists who persecuted his grandfather.”

Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, claimed the decoration decision “foreshadowed everything that was to come the next six years.”

Boris Johnson, who was then mayor of London and is now prime minister, went furthest. He blamed the swap on the “part-Kenyan President’s ancestral dislike of the British empire.”

The attacks were blatantly racist and also misleading. Obama officials were infuriated.

There are actually two identical Churchill busts, both by the British modernist sculptor Sir Jacob Epstein. One has been in the White House collection since Lyndon B. Johnson’s administration. Another was lent by Prime Minister Tony Blair to the George W. Bush White House when the other one was being restored.

The one from Blair sat on display in the Oval Office until Bush departed. It was returned to the British government.

Under Obama, the White House-owned version was not displayed in the Oval Office; instead, Obama kept it outside the Treaty Room in the Residence, where he walked past it when he wanted to watch basketball on the weekends and evenings. He chose to put it there so he would see it during his personal time. He had a bust of King in the office.

He addressed the situation during his final year in office.

“I love the guy,” he said during a visit to London, adding later: “There are only so many tables where you can put busts. Otherwise, it starts looking a little cluttered.”

When Trump arrived, he returned Churchill to the Oval Office, much to the (proclaimed) pleasure of the Brits. Then-Prime Minister Theresa May, who was Trump’s first foreign visitor to the Oval Office, came armed with the UK version of the bust to present to Trump. Officials said the Trump team had requested it.

“We were very pleased that you accepted it back,” May told him.

Now, the bust is gone again. But Johnson, who is now Prime Minister and is hoping to cement strong ties with the new administration, does not appear to have the same reaction.

“The Oval Office is the President’s private office, and it’s up to the President to decorate it as he wishes,” a Downing Street spokesman said on Thursday. “We’re in no doubt about the importance President Biden places on the UK-US relationship, and the Prime Minister looks forward to having that close relationship with him.”

Read original article here

Breath of the Wild mod makes buying Link’s house less of a scam

While some would argue that The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild is perhaps one of the greatest games ever made, there are still aspects of the experience that are disappointing, or not quite as fleshed out as they could be. Take buying a house, for example. Seems like it would be a pretty big deal, right? Dropping thousands of rupees to own a piece of property carries with it the expectation that you’ll get something worth your while.

Instead, the house just has some knick knacks that you can display (for more rupees!), and it also lets you restore your health. You’ll probably still buy the house if you’re a completionist, but the cost doesn’t quite seem to justify the return on investment. Perhaps this is why modders like Waikuteru have come to the rescue.

As spotted by Eurogamer, a new Breath of the Wild mod revamps the house and gives it a total makeover. There are more decorations that make the space cozier, like hanging concept art, but that’s just the start. There’s also a new stable where you can store a horse, a fast travel point, a cooking area, a fishing spot, and even a mechanic that allows you to keep a pet. Depending on how you treat your pet chicken, it can reward Link with eggs that can be used for cooking. Nice.

The video above shows off all the perks that come with the mod, but unfortunately, you can’t experience this unless you’re playing an emulated version of BOTW. Still, it’s nice to see folks beefing up a game that’s already excellent — perhaps Nintendo will try and incorporate some of these ideas in the eventual follow-up?

Read original article here