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Boy, 5, dies in party balloon horror as sister makes desperate plea

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Experts say inhaling helium can displace oxygen in the lungs with fatal consequences

A sister endured unimaginable heartbreak years ago when her brother, 5, died after playing with a simple party decoration. Karlton Noah Donaghey was only away from his mum’s gaze for a couple of minutes.

Sadly that was all it took for the boy to get hold of a helium balloon, with fatal consequences. Now his elder sister Kaitlin is raising awareness of the fatal consequences of breathing in helium products, which can all too quickly result in brain death.

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Experts have warned that just one breath of the colourless gas could prove fatal, with oxygen displaced from the lungs, in turn depriving vital organs of oxygen. The Mirror reports how the hours leading up to what the coroner would later describe as “every parent’s nightmare” were completely normal.

It was June 23, 2022, a bright, hot day, and like many children, young Karlton was out enjoying the glorious sunshine. At a loose end, his sister Kaitlin, now 29, had taken her twin daughters, then both eight months old, over to the family home, to bask in her mother Lisa Donaghey’s “sun trap” of a garden.

The family nibbled contentedly on sandwiches and cherries, while young Karlton played in the pop-up swimming pool. Speaking with the Mirror, Kaitlin recalled how, as the baby of the family, Karlton harboured the usual sort of childhood jealousy towards his baby nieces, so used was he to being the centre of attention.

After getting out of the pool, he asked for a cuddle, but at that point, his mother and sister were busily feeding the twins, while seated on the rocking chair.

Kaitlin, from Gateshead, remembered: “My mam said, ‘Well, just let us feed one of the girls, and then I’ll give you some you time and me, and you can have a cuddle’.” It was then that Karlton headed to the toilet instead.

As they fed the babies, neither Kaitlin nor Lisa had any idea that they would never hear him speak again. As the minutes wore on, the family began to wonder what was taking Karlton so long.

But Kaitlin initially assumed the little lad was spending time washing his hands, something he “loved” to do. Kaitlin shared: “He took so much care.

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“He loved doing his hair, his aftershave, and his teeth brushing. He would go over the top.

“He was the most hygienic five-year-old boy who really looked after himself and be handsome.”

Lisa decided to go on inside and check on him anyway, and in a matter of moments, the happy household descended into scenes of complete horror. Kaitlin recalled the frantic seconds: “I just heard the most awful screeching noises I’ve never experienced before.

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“And automatically, I just assumed that someone had my mam at knife point in the passage or in the house. When I walked in, my mam had him in her arms, lifeless. He was already dead.”

In the small window of time it took for Kaitlin to follow on into the house, her mother walked in upon a scene no parent should have to witness. Karlton was lying motionless on the floor, the helium balloon he’d been given at a fair over his face.

As explained by Kaitlin, her brother had never really cared for sweets; he’d just wanted the balloon. Heartbreakingly, his mother had tried to make the innocent treat safer by cutting the string away, ensuring that it wouldn’t end up coiled around his neck.

Like many parents, she hadn’t been aware of the dangers of helium. The balloon had been “floating in the air”, but he had managed to climb for it, just as any “five-year-old adventurous child would”.

Upon finding her son, Lisa “immediately” pulled the balloon away from his face. The traumatic shock of the situation left her initially unable to comprehend what had happened to her beloved son, remembered as such a “happy, genuine little boy” by those who knew him.

Kaitlin told us: “She was in such a state of shock. I don’t think she’d put together what was actually happening.

“She’s just screeched, and she couldn’t get words out.

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“She couldn’t talk, she couldn’t phone an ambulance. She just completely dropped to her knees.

“So I picked Karlton up off my mam. I’ve put him on the floor, and I’ve shook his shoulders, and I said, ‘Karlton’, and then I just looked at his face.

“His eyes were wide open. His colour had completely gone, and I knew at that minute he needed CPR.”

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With her devastated mother in a terrible state, and her daughters too young to help, Kaitlin knew it was down to her alone to do what she could for her brother. Showing extraordinary strength, she endeavoured to “ring the ambulance, put it on speaker, start CPR”.

It only took four minutes for the ambulance to reach the house, but it proved to be a harrowing wait. Kaitlin recounted: “The ambulance was taking their time, and they were saying, ‘Is he breathing?’, and I just screamed at them, and I said, ‘He’s not breathing. He’s dead.

“I’m telling you, he’s dead. Like he’s already gone’.”

Hearing the agonised screeches, a neighbour, Aimee, who was trained in first aid, rushed in from outside to take over in CPR and didn’t stop until help arrived. Kaitlin’s gratitude towards her neighbour, whose kindness may well have given her a few more precious days with her brother, is evident.

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Karlton was taken to the hospital in a gravely serious state, and it was down to Kaitlin to break the news to their grandmother, all while making sure to get her own children home. It was, she says, a “surreal” time, and, despite Karlton’s serious condition, they held out hope that such a “strong” boy would pull through.

Kaitlin had wanted to wait until her other brother got home to break the news, fearing for him driving after such a shock, but sadly, neighbours got there first, expressing sorrows over his loss before he learned what had happened. At this point, Karlton was still alive, but in a “dangerous situation”.

In the days that followed, Kaitlin remained hopeful, but it eventually became clear that her little brother, with his curious spirit, wouldn’t be coming back to them. The family spent six days with Karlton in the hospital, after which he suffered seizures, resulting in global brain damage.

At one point, the lad stopped breathing altogether while he was being transported for scans due to a machine failure. Kaitlin believes that, even in her brother’s severe condition, he could still hear them talking to him, noting how his heart monitor would “go through the roof” when certain words were said.

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But then things took another devastating turn. It was towards the end of the fifth day that medics broke the news the family had been dreading.

Kaitlin disclosed: “They said, ‘You know, there’s really nothing we can do, and it will be kinder to turn the machines off’. Still, I presumed that he would still breathe.

“I just thought, ‘He’ll do it. He’s only five. He’s strong. He’s healthy’. Prior to all this, he was just such a strong, willing little boy. I thought he would fight it.

“But then we decided to turn the machines off.”

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Reflecting on her mother’s final moments with Karlton, while the rest of them waited in the family room, Kaitlin said: “She spoke to him, she made him promises. She made sure to clean his hair, and brush his teeth, and wipe his face, and change him into fresh PJs and socks with his aftershave on, and all his teddies.

“She turned his machine off, and he just didn’t pull through.” She added: “I know that my mam promised him, ‘If you need to go now, I’ll let you go.

“You go to sleep now, and don’t worry about mam. I promise I’ll be strong’. […] And she’s kept that promise.

“She’s been strong. Had she not, I don’t know what situation she would be in now.”

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Nearly four years on, and Karlton’s bereaved family are still working their way through “a massive range of emotions”. Kaitlin said, “One minute you can be having a good day, and then you’d feel guilty for even smiling because then you’re missing them.”

For Kaitlin, her brother’s death still feels as though it was “just yesterday”, and she doesn’t believe any family members have really adjusted to the loss. She still thinks about his voice “all the time”, and sometimes thinks she can still hear him shouting out, “sister!”

She also feels his presence in one of her daughters, who shares Karlton’s fascination with all things dinosaurs, despite being too young to remember how her late uncle could remember and pronounce all the different names perfectly.

She said: “I think small things, a song, a sound, a smell, everything jogs your memory back to him. I was 18 when my mam had him, it was the best thing ever.

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“I was old enough to look after him. I could do my own thing with him. He was a part of me, but also my brother.”

Going forward, Kaitlin hopes to highlight just how dangerous the popular party treat, so often seen as a harmless bit of fun, actually is. She told the Mirror: “It’s too large of a risk to take, you’re dicing with death.

“You might make it and just have a silly voice, but you don’t know which way it’s going to turn out.”

Kaitlin has heard of two other children who’ve died after inhaling helium since Karlton’s passing, and is determined that no more lives be lost. And while she has become all too aware of the risks in the most terrible way imaginable, there are still far too many who don’t understand just how quickly and irreversibly the effects can take hold, both for children and adults.

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On April 2, 2021, eight-year-old Luke Ramone Harper, from Dublin, was declared dead at Temple Street Children’s Hospital, the day after he placed a partially deflated helium balloon over his face. As reported by Metro, Luke’s heartbroken parents brought him out into the fresh air and attempted chest compressions, but to no avail.

The youngster suffered a cardiac arrest after being rushed to the hospital, with coroner Cróna Gallagher returning a verdict of accidental death. Then, on April 27, 2024, while loved ones were celebrating his eighth birthday at his Merseyside home, Joshua Dunbar was discovered unconscious in his bedroom, beside a helium balloon shaped like a figure of eight.

Although Joshua was rushed to the hospital, he sadly didn’t survive, with a post-mortem confirming his death as “consistent with asphyxia involving a helium balloon”. During the inquest, coroner Andre Rebello emphasised that, while helium is not poisonous, “the breathing of helium prevented oxygen getting into his body, and without oxygen, within minutes, life is not achievable.”

For Kaitlin, reading about such cases is agony. She remarked, “To find that this is continuing to happen after trying to raise awareness is absolutely gut-wrenching; it hurts so much to hear that another life has been lost due to inhalation of helium.

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“I feel a huge responsibility to make everyone aware, just in case I can possibly save a life, I wish I could scream it from the rooftops and let the whole world hear me.

“I won’t ever be able to hear my brother’s voice or feel his touch again. Life is now filled with pain and will never be the same.

“I don’t want any other family to feel this way.”

Kaitlin is now greatly concerned by a current trend of people sucking gas out of nitrous oxide cans, and has urged them to think of their families at home before doing something “so so deadly” for a “two-second buzz”. She’s also concerned about reports of this being used as a method of suicide.

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Describing one such instance, she explained: “I’m in touch with another lady. Her brother was only 25, and he just bought it and put a bag over his head and just kept breathing, and he didn’t know he was dying.

“Your body thinks you’re breathing because you’re not struggling for breath, but you’re actually just breathing in helium, and that displaces oxygen.

“So before you know it, a couple of seconds, and you’ve got no oxygen in your brain, so you die without knowing. You generally don’t know until you’ve entered cardiac arrest.”

Having learned such awful facts the hard way, she’s “tired” of people thinking this sort of thing “won’t happen to them”, when really, what happened to Karlton could have happened to any family. Kaitlin told us: “Everyone questions, why has your son got hold of helium and why was he unattended?

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“But in reality, five-year-olds can go to the toilet unattended.”

At the time of the coroner’s report, Kaitlin was hopeful that a course would be introduced for anyone working with helium and that warning signs would be displayed alongside the balloons. In their report, coroner James Thompson outlined matters of concern in a letter addressed to The Office for Product Safety and Standards (OPSS), namely, that “the balloon which caused the death are freely available to purchase without restriction, particularly at locations of places of entertainment for children”, “Parents and those responsible for supervision of children are not fully aware of the risks posed to young children of helium filled balloons”, “the balloon in question displayed no warning as to the potential risk to young children”

Four years on, though, and Kaitlin says she’s yet to see a single label, and feels that much more needs to be done. Kaitlin continued: “Regardless of how safe you want to be about it, the only way to ensure your child doesn’t inhale helium is to just not buy it.

“No parent can be with their child 24/7. It’s impossible. It really is impossible.

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“You can just go to the toilet upstairs, and your child can be doing something else downstairs. To take that risk away, just don’t buy them.

“You can get the balloon stacks that are filled with air and are spectacular-looking. It doesn’t have to be helium.”

The Mirror has reached out to the British Standards Institution, the Office for Product Safety and Standards (OPSS), the British Toy and Hobby Association and the British Retail Consortium for comment.

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Bookies on the floor as Grand National winner lands punter huge sum

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I Am Maximus became the first horse since Red Rum to win the Grand National twice as one punter landed £800,000 from a sensational £100,000 bet

One punter found themselves £800,000 wealthier after a remarkable wager on I Am Maximus to secure the Grand National title for a second time.

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I Am Maximus made history by becoming the first horse since Red Rum to reclaim the Grand National title, with jockey Paul Townend guiding him to victory.

The winning horse was a popular choice throughout the day and was the 9/2 favourite for Townend, trainer Willie Mullins and owner JP McManus.

However, one punter had more reason than most to celebrate after placing an enormous bet on the 10 year old gelding.

Before the race, ITV Racing revealed that on-course bookmakers Fitzwilliam Sports accepted a £100,000 bet on I Am Maximus at 8/1.

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Johnny Dineen, a professional gambler who has been working with Fitzwilliam Sports at Aintree this week, shared details of the bet with ITV Racing.

Dineen stated: “It’s the biggest bet we’ve ever taken, £100,000 at 8/1.

“It’s our biggest bet by a mile and we’ll have to try to trade some of it off in the ring.

“It goes without saying it would be a bad result for us!”

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Indeed, it proved to be a disastrous outcome for Fitzwilliam Sport, run by Irishman Paul Byrne, the bookmaker and racehorse owner whose blue silks were donned by the triumphant Soldier In Milan in last weekend’s Irish Grand National.

The lucky punter walked away with a staggering £800,000 from their audacious bet on one of the sport’s most unpredictable races.

With Dineen having departed to catch a flight home, Kieran Stokes was left to recount Fitzwilliam’s unfortunate story.

“We did lay some of it off but not enough!” he said.

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“It was the money that followed after which made it worse as he went off 9-2, it was just a steady stream of support for him in the final hour.

“Grangeclare West was very popular, but we also laid a few quid on Jordans as well so when he shot clear and the only hope we had of getting him beat was I Am Maximus we knew we were in trouble!

“It’s been a great week, our first time here and it’s not put us off, we’ll be back next year to have another go. It’s the hardest race of the year for a reason.

“You grew up on stories of how good trade was in betting rings and this has been a throwback to that I suppose.

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“There was an almighty gamble on the winner of the Irish National on Easter Monday as well, but we were on the right end of that as the owner of the horse, Paul Byrne, also owns our company!”

Overall, the outcome proved costly for bookmakers throughout the sector. Nicola McGeady from Ladbrokes remarked: “Hats off to the punters who stayed loyal to I Am Maximus; there was a massive wave of support for him all week.

“It was a result we didn’t want to see, and we can safely say it was a ‘Punters’ Grand National’ through and through.”

A representative from Betfair commented: “It was a bruising result. Punters have had much the better of it, getting involved in what was a mammoth public gamble.

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“The winner represented the worst result in our book and the places offered little comfort. Well done to the maestro, JP McManus.”

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NI woman on devastation of dad’s terminal cancer diagnosis days before Christmas

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“My dad was always a big strong man, but he became so frail before he died,” said Amy

The daughter of a man diagnosed with terminal cancer just days before Christmas has spoken about her devastation but how the family were helped through this heartbreaking time.

Just days before Christmas, Amy O’Neill’s family were left devastated when her father Ernie was diagnosed with terminal bowel cancer. According to Amy, her family could not have coped without Foyle Hospice, whose `incredible’ support helped bring comfort during the most difficult time of her life.

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“I cannot stress enough how amazing this service is within our community,” said Amy, who is a former FUSE FM Ballymoney DJ and Co-owner of Causeway Bowls.

READ MORE: Rory McIlroy facing criticism for comment about Masters Champions DinnerREAD MORE: Ambulance service warns protesters not to ‘impede’ emergency vehicles during NI fuel demonstrations

“Foyle Hospice allowed me to simply be a daughter to my dad again, taking away the stress of caring for him. It completely changed our experience, and I know his final days would have been very different if he had remained at home or in hospital.”

Before his diagnosis, Ernie worked as a self-employed IT Technician, and was well-known throughout the local community.

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“My dad was always a big strong man, but he became so frail before he died,” said Amy. “However, he took everything in his stride and fought through it.“He was very settled and comfortable at Foyle Hospice. The staff were always so friendly and amazing. Unfortunately, my daddy couldn’t eat and I remember the chef telling him how they could take special requests and make him anything he wanted. Daddy really enjoyed the vanilla milkshakes.

“My daddy had spent a long time in hospital and hadn’t been outside for quite a while. One day, he asked the nurses if he could get some fresh air. Although he was bed bound, they didn’t hesitate — they opened the patio doors and wheeled his bed outside. He was able to enjoy the beautiful views and watch the horses in the field nearby. It’s a moment that will always stay with me.“However, the care was not only offered to my dad but extended to us as a family – the nurses were always helpful and lovely, even asking myself and my mum if we had eaten and would offer us tea and coffee. We felt like we were being supported just as much as my dad. It was very special and I will never forget that.”

Amy, from Limavady, explained that her family were offered access to an apartment at Foyle Hospice, enabling them to remain close to her father and avoid the stress of daily travel.She added: “The apartment was exactly what we needed. It had its own shower and kitchen, and it made everything more manageable for us. We used it during the day and were able to be with my dad in his room at night, allowing us to spend precious time together.

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Following Ernie’s death, on August 2, 2024, Amy began to receive adult bereavement counselling, which is one of many services offered at Foyle Hospice, after the death of a loved one.

Amy said: “The counselling has really helped me. I didn’t cry for months after my dad died, but I’ve learned that it’s okay to feel and express those emotions. It’s reassuring to know I’m not alone, and having someone to talk to has made a big difference.

“I would just like to thank everyone at Foyle Hospice who cared for my father and supported my family. I have experienced first-hand what it is like and I would recommend it to anyone – the care is fantastic. We are so grateful to everyone involved and I know that my dad’s last days would have been so different without the care of the amazing Foyle Hospice.”

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Nasa’s Artemis crew welcomed back to Planet Earth in Houston

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Nasa's Artemis crew welcomed back to Planet Earth in Houston

The four astronauts who flew in Nasa’s Artemis II mission around the Moon have been welcomed back to Planet Earth at an event in Houston, Texas.

Commander Reid Wiseman said the mission was “the most special thing I ever went through in my life”.

The astronauts – Wiseman, pilot Victor Glover, mission specialist Christina Koch and Canadian astronaut Jeremy Hansen – were all reunited with their families on Saturday.

Their nine-day voyage took them further from Earth than any humans in history.

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The pseudoscientific attractiveness scale that grew out of incel forums and is now making money for looksmaxxing influencers

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The pseudoscientific attractiveness scale that grew out of incel forums and is now making money for looksmaxxing influencers

If you have teenagers in your life, they’ll probably have heard of the PSL scale. Or at least the language associated with it. Chad. Stacy. Normie. Subhuman.

The PSL scale is a pseudoscientific attractiveness rating system used by looksmaxxers, men in a part of the manosphere who sometimes use extreme methods to change their appearance. The scale purports to rank people into different categories based on their physical appearance, with looksmaxxers deeming that the higher up the scale a man is, the more attractive he will be to women.

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The roots of this rating system lie in misogynistic online forums used by incels or involuntarily celibates, but now it’s all over social media, where teenage boys post photos of themselves, asking to be ranked. PSL apps are also available which will rate a person’s photograph, and give them AI-powered advice, sometimes for a fee, on how to “move up” the scale.

So how did the language of incels, and this one way of quantifying attractiveness and beauty, become so mainstream?

In this episode of The Conversation Weekly podcast, we speak to Jordan Foster, an associate professor of sociology at MacEwan University in Alberta, Canada, who researches social media, beauty and masculinity. He explains the origins of the PSL scale, where it fits into the manosphere, and how some looksmaxxing influencers are making money off it.

PSL is an abbreviation of three, now defunct, online incel forums. Foster says that a precise dialogue emerged from discussions on these forums about what features constitute attractiveness and beauty, which turned into a pseudoscientific rating system. “So there might be notions, for example, that a strong brow bone or a stronger jawline is going to communicate a certain amount of testosterone and that this is going to suggest something about your virility or your fitness.”

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Foster suggests the idea that beauty can be quantifiable in this way emerged as some men came to terms with “a topic that has historically been taboo and feminised”. He says looksmaxxers realised that if they wanted to have a discussion about beauty, they needed to communicate it in a language that is traditionally more palatable for men. “How do you do that? Wrap it in the guise of science.”

Listen to the interview with Jordan Foster on The Conversation Weekly podcast and read an article he wrote with his colleague Jillian Sunderland at the University of Toronto . This episode was written and produced by Katie Flood and Gemma Ware. Mixing by Eleanor Brezzi and theme music by Neeta Sarl.

Newsclips in this episode from NBC News, The Social CTV, CTV News, Tamron Hall Show, Saturday Night Live, BrettMaverick and PrestigeClipper via TikTok.

Listen to The Conversation Weekly via any of the apps listed above, download it directly via our RSS feed or find out how else to listen here. A transcript of this episode is available via the Apple Podcasts or Spotify apps.

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Artemis II astronauts return to Houston home base after moon flyby

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Artemis II astronauts return to Houston home base after moon flyby

HOUSTON (AP) — Still marveling over their moon mission, the Artemis II astronauts received a thunderous welcome home Saturday from hundreds who took part in NASA’s lunar comeback that set a record for deep space travel.

The crew of four arrived at Ellington Field near NASA’s Johnson Space Center and Mission Control, flying in from San Diego, where they splashed down just offshore the evening before.

After a quick reunion with their spouses and children, commander Reid Wiseman, pilot Victor Glover, Christina Koch and Canada’s Jeremy Hansen took the hangar stage, surrounded by space center workers and other invited guests. They were introduced by NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman, among the first to greet them aboard the recovery ship Friday.

“Ladies and gentlemen, your Artemis II crew,” Isaacman said to a standing ovation.

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The jubilant crowd included flight directors and the launch director, Orion capsule and exploration system managers, high-ranking military officers, members of Congress, the space agency’s entire blue-suited astronaut corps and even retired ones, and more.

Their homecoming was poignant: They returned to NASA’s Houston base on the 56th anniversary of the launch of Apollo 13, whose “Houston, we’ve had a problem” refrain turned a near-disaster into triumph.

“This was not easy.” an emotional Wiseman said. “Before you launch, it feels like it’s the greatest dream on Earth. And when you’re out there, you just want to get back to your families and your friends. It’s a special thing to be a human, and it’s a special thing to be on planet Earth.”

Added Glover: “I have not processed what we just did and I’m afraid to start even trying.”

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Hansen said the four of them embodied love “and extracting joy out of that” as the four joined together to stand in a row, embracing one another. “When you look up here, you’re not looking at us. We are a mirror reflecting you. And if you like what you see, then just look a little deeper. This is you.”

During Artemis II’s nearly 10-day mission, the astronauts voyaged deeper into space than the moon explorers of decades past and captured views of the lunar far side never witnessed before by human eyes. A total solar eclipse added to the cosmic wonder.

On their record-breaking flyby, the astronauts reached a maximum 252,756 miles (406,771 kilometers) from Earth before hanging a U-turn behind the moon, eclipsing Apollo’s 13 distance record.

The mission also revealed a new side of our planet with an Earthset photo, showing our Blue Marble setting behind the gray, pockmarked moon. The image echoed the famous Earthrise shot from 1968 taken by the world’s first lunar visitors, Apollo 8.

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“Honestly, what struck me wasn’t necessarily just Earth, it was all the blackness around it. Earth was just this lifeboat hanging undisturbedly in the universe,” Koch said. “Planet Earth you are a crew.”

Despite the accomplishments, Artemis II astronauts had to contend with a more mundane problem — a malfunctioning space toilet. NASA promised a design fix before longer moon-landing missions.

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Wiseman, Glover, Koch and Hansen were the first humans to fly to the moon since Apollo 17 closed out NASA’s first exploration era in 1972. Twenty-four astronauts flew to the moon during Apollo, including 12 moonwalkers.

Apollo 13 commander Jim Lovell — who also flew on Apollo 8 — cheered the Artemis II crew on in a wake-up message recorded before he died last summer.

It was crucial for NASA that Artemis II go well. The space agency is already preparing for next year’s Artemis III, which will see a new crew practice docking its capsule with a lunar lander in orbit around Earth. That will set the stage for the all-important Artemis IV moon landing in 2028, when two astronauts attempt a touchdown near the lunar south pole.

“The long wait is over. After a brief 53-year intermission, the show goes on,” Isaacman said.

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The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Department of Science Education and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. The AP is solely responsible for all content.

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Trump takes the spotlight at UFC 327 in Miami, greeting Rogan and Rubio

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Trump takes the spotlight at UFC 327 in Miami, greeting Rogan and Rubio

The main attraction early at UFC 327 on Saturday night wasn’t any of the fighters, but President Donald Trump.

Trump entered the Kaseya Center shortly after 9 p.m. to watch the light heavyweight fight between Jiri Prochazka and Carlos Ulberg. He was accompanied by Dana White, the president of Ultimate Fighting Championship, and several members of the Trump family.

As a Kid Rock song blasted from the speakers, Trump walked to his seat where Secretary of State Marco Rubio was waiting. Also nearby was Sergio Gor, the U.S. ambassador to India.

Trump shook hands with attendees on the floor and made a point of greeting Joe Rogan, the podcaster who also works as a UFC color commentator.

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Trump gave several smiles to the cameras.

Earlier, on his way to the arena, Trump’s Truth Social account posted an advertisement that appeared to be for a UFC fight at the White House on June 14, on what would be Trump’s 80th birthday.

A crowd of onlookers could be seen filming the presidential motorcade upon arrival.

With former champion Alex Pereira vacating the belt to move up and challenge for the interim heavyweight crown at UFC Freedom 250 at the White House, Ulberg (14-1-0) earned his spot across Procházka (32-5-1) in the main event of Saturday’s card.

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On the main undercard, fellow light heavyweights Azamat Murzakanov (16-0-0) and Paulo Costa (15-4-0) will battle in what might end up being a qualifier for the victor to meet the winner of Ulberg and Procházka.

Fifth-ranked heavyweight Curtis Blaydes (19-5-0) will battle undefeated Josh Hokit (8-0-0).

Reyes (15-5-0), now the 10th-ranked light heavyweight, will battle No. 12 Johnny Walker (22-9-0).

In the featherweight division, Cub Swanson (31-14-0) stopped Nate Landwehr (18-8-0).

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AP MMA: https://apnews.com/hub/mixed-martial-arts

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Dementia risk may be raised by drinking more of one beverage – and it’s not coffee

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Scientists have warned that even moderate consumption may accelerate the onset of dementia

If you want to reduce your chances of developing dementia, there’s one habit worth giving up, or at least cutting back on.

Research from a study suggests that regular alcohol use may do more than just leave you with a hangover with increasing evidence indicating it could have a significant negative impact on your cognitive health.

According to the NHS, dementia affects more than 944,000 people in the UK. The study highlighted the link between the drink and the condition in a 2023 peer-reviewed journal by Atrium Health. Researchers used a ‘chronic drinking approach’ in which mice were given the option to drink water or alcohol across 10 weeks.

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The US-based researchers were especially focused on exploring the link between alcohol consumption and the development of Alzheimer’s disease, which accounts for around 60% to 80% of all dementia cases. Their findings showed that even “moderate” drinking levels were sufficient to speed up brain atrophy.

This refers to the shrinking and deterioration of brain tissue, coupled with a rise in ‘amyloid plaques’ – harmful proteins closely associated with Alzheimer’s. “These findings suggest alcohol might accelerate the pathological cascade of Alzheimer’s disease in its early stages,” said Associate Professor Shannon Macauley, of Wake Forest University School of Medicine, at the time.

“These preclinical findings suggest that even moderate consumption of alcohol can result in brain injury. Alcohol consumption may be a modifiable risk factor for Alzheimer’s disease and dementia”, reports Surrey Live.

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Importantly, these results aren’t confined to studies on mice. In 2024, researchers at Oxford University identified alcohol as one of the most significant contributors to declining cognitive health, with the potential to increase the risk of Alzheimer’s.

The team analysed the brain scans of 40,000 individuals to determine this. Professor Gwenaëlle Douaud, who led the study, said: “We know that a constellation of brain regions degenerates earlier in ageing, and in this new study we have shown that these specific parts of the brain are most vulnerable to diabetes, traffic-related air pollution − increasingly a major player in dementia − and alcohol, of all the common risk factors for dementia.

“We have found that several variations in the genome influence this brain network, and they are implicated in cardiovascular deaths, schizophrenia, Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s diseases, as well as with the two antigens of a little-known blood group, the elusive XG antigen system, which was an entirely new and unexpected finding.”

Current UK guidance from the NHS states that being aware of your units will help you stay in control of your drinking.

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To keep health risks from alcohol to a low level if you drink most weeks, it suggests:

  • Men and women are advised not to drink more than 14 units a week on a regular basis
  • spread ySpreadinking over 3 or more days if you regularly drink as much as 14 units a week
  • If you want to cut down, try to have several drink-free days each week

It adds: “14 units is equivalent to 6 pints of average-strength beer or 10 small glasses of lower-strength wine.”

For information on alcohol units and support, visit the NHS website here.

What are the signs of dementia?

Accoridng to Dementia UK: “Dementia is an umbrella term for a range of conditions that affect the brain. There are many different types, subtypes and causes. It is a progressive condition, which means the symptoms always get worse over time.”

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It added: “The most common symptoms of dementia include difficulties with remembering, thinking and speaking, which get worse over time. However, there are many other possible symptoms, and everyone has their own unique experience of the condition.”

You can read all about the signs and symptoms of dementia online via the Dementia UK website.

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Owen Hargreaves claims only two Arsenal players ‘played properly’ in Bournemouth defeat | Football

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Owen Hargreaves claims only two Arsenal players 'played properly' in Bournemouth defeat | Football
Owen Hargreaves says Arsenal have been ‘outplayed’ in three of their last four games (Premier League)

Owen Hargreaves believes only Declan Rice and Gabriel Magalhaes ‘played properly’ in Arsenal’s 2-1 defeat to Bournemouth on Saturday.

Mikel Arteta’s side delivered another unconvincing performance as Viktor Gyokeres’ penalty cancelled out Junior Kroupi’s opener before Alex Scott scored the winner for Bournemouth in the 74th minute at the Emirates Stadium.

The defeat means Arsenal are still nine points clear at the top of the Premier League but Manchester City now have two games in hand and also play the Gunners next Sunday.

Arteta, meanwhile, continues to face criticism over Arsenal’s playing style and their inability to create several clear-cut chances during games.

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‘They [Arsenal] didn’t play confident,’ Hargreaves told Premier League Productions.

‘I was at the game and the crowd were super up for it at the beginning of the game, by the end of it they were not happy with what they saw.

LONDON, ENGLAND - APRIL 11: Declan Rice of Arsenal reacts during the Premier League match between Arsenal and Bournemouth at Emirates Stadium on April 11, 2026 in London, England. (Photo by Justin Setterfield/Getty Images)
Owen Hargreaves believes Declan Rice is one of the only Arsenal players who deserved credit after the defeat to Bournemouth (Getty)

‘The only ones who played properly were Declan Rice and Gabriel, the rest of them got thoroughly outplayed.

‘Bournemouth were brilliant by the way, they pressed the life out of Arsenal.

‘Arsenal could not keep the ball for the life of them, kept going long, they’d pass the ball back to the goalkeeper, I think it was 39 times in the game, David Raya had the second-most passes of an Arsenal player. They just really encouraged Bournemouth into that press and the press is probably one of the best in the Premier League but they just surprised Arsenal and they deserved to win the game.

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Mikel Arteta is facing criticism over Arsenal’s struggles in attacking areas (Shutterstock)

‘I think the biggest problem is they’ve been outplayed in three of the last four games – City in the Carabao Cup final, Southampton in the FA Cup, and then today.

‘They had the win against Sporting but David Raya was one of their best players in that game and he made quite a few saves so there is a little bit of a trend there where they’re being outplayed.

‘They’ve worked so hard to get to this point but they have to finish the job. Today they lacked a little bit of courage, belief and a little bit of aggression in crucial moments, Bournemouth were more aggressive today.’

For more stories like this, check our sport page.

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Two air ambulances land in Smithills amid ‘medical emergency’

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Two air ambulances land in Smithills amid ‘medical emergency’

The helicopters were seen touching down on Oxford Grove playing fields in the early evening.

Ivy Road was closed as emergency crews responded to a suspected medical episode.

Paramedics from the North West Ambulance Service (NWAS) took the lead in treating the casualty.

Emergency crews worked togetherEmergency crews worked together (Image: Phil Taylor)

A spokesperson for the Greater Manchester Police confirmed the incident was in its early stages when officers were first called shortly before 5.30pm.

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There was no further police role beyond assisting ambulance colleagues.

Ivy Road, where the incident took place, was blocked to driversIvy Road, where the incident took place, was blocked to drivers (Image: Phil Taylor)

Witnesses described a large emergency presence in the area, with multiple responders, police vehicles and an ambulance in attendance.

A crowd of residents gathered nearby as treatment was carried out, with reports that a dignity sheet was put in place.

An onlooker told The Bolton News that a child was seen assisting emergency crews at the scene.

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A child helping emergency crews at the sceneA child helping the emergency team (Image: Phil Taylor)

At around 6.30pm, air ambulance crews were seen preparing to leave, with one aircraft departing shortly afterwards and a ground ambulance also leaving the area.

By 7pm, Ivy Road had reopened to traffic and the incident was reported to have been cleared.

The condition of the casualty has not been confirmed.

The North West Ambulance Service (NWAS) has been contacted for comment.

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Prince Andrew’s ‘cruel jibe’ at Fergie revealed as book lifts lid on strained relationship

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Prince Andrew allegedly insulted Sarah Ferguson’s appearance during a private lunch, according to a royal author who claims their long-standing bond hides a far more complicated and tense dynamic behind palace doors.

A royal author has claimed the relationship between Andrew Mountbatten Windsor and Sarah Ferguson has been far more strained behind closed doors than they have publicly suggested over the years.

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In her bestselling book The Palace Papers, journalist Tina Brown alleges that Andrew once made a cruel and humiliating remark about his ex-wife’s appearance during a lunch at Royal Lodge in 2015.

According to the account, he entered the room while Ferguson was dining with a visiting media executive from the US and reportedly referred to her using an offensive insult. The witness was said to be left stunned by the comment, later suggesting it hinted at a dynamic in which Ferguson appeared uneasy around her former husband.

Andrew and Ferguson divorced in the mid-1990s following a series of high-profile scandals involving infidelity, but remained unusually close in the decades that followed. They frequently described themselves as the “happiest divorced couple in the world” and continued to live together at Royal Lodge, near Windsor Castle, for many years.

Despite this outward show of unity, Brown claims their relationship has been more complicated, describing it as “symbiotic” — with each appearing to rely on the other for support during times of difficulty.

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Ferguson has faced well-documented financial struggles over the years, and Brown suggests Andrew often stepped in to assist. In return, Ferguson has consistently defended him in public, including during the fallout from his association with disgraced financier Jeffrey Epstein.

Andrew has repeatedly denied allegations linked to the scandal, while Ferguson has described him as a “kind, great man” and said she stands by him with “integrity and loyalty.”

Additional claims about Andrew’s behaviour have emerged in other recent books, including one by historian Andrew Lownie. His work alleges the duke was known for rude outbursts, crude jokes and humiliating pranks, including verbally abusing staff and embarrassing guests at social gatherings. Former aides reportedly described him as abrupt and demanding, in stark contrast to other members of the Royal Family.

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While Andrew and Ferguson have long presented a united and amicable front in public, these accounts paint a more complicated and, at times, uncomfortable picture of their private relationship — one marked by loyalty, dependence and underlying tension.

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