#UK This is how to pick and cut your own Christmas tree

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This holiday season, don your best flannel, pass on the convenience of a curbside tree sale, and head to a real Christmas tree farm instead, like Tilden Lane Farm, which is 30-minutes outside of New York City. 

According to the University of Illinois, there are more than 15,000 Christmas tree farms in the United States, an acre of which provides enough daily oxygen for 18 people.

Besides fresh air, farms let you wander through rows and rows of trees, allowing you to choose what type of tree you want, as well as one that’s the perfect size for your apartment.

Here’s how to do it right.

Story and video by Adam Banicki

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#UK How to use your cell phone when you’re in a foreign country

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phoneThe last thing you want to come home to after an international trip is an unexpected cell phone bill. But making sure your cel phone will work is often low down on your pre-trip checklist, and it can be pretty confusing too.

Of course, it’s important to have a working phone for safety reasons as well as social and practical considerations. So, before you get stuck trying to unlock your phone on the go or get left with hefty data roaming fees, brush up on these four common ways to go about prepping your phone for international travel.

RELATED: The Ultimate Checklist for Traveling Abroad

Unlock your phone and use your SIM card

sim_card

The cheapest way to approach data roaming abroad is to use a foreign SIM card for the country you’re traveling in. These can often be purchased at the airport and usually cost between $1-2 (or are free with purchase of a pre-paid plan). You can then purchase a prepaid data and texting plan with your new international carrier. Keep in mind this will give you a different phone number for the time you use the SIM card. Basic data and text plans are usually way less than any U.S. carriers’ international plan or their hefty data charges.

When I traveled to Australia for nine months, I went this route and paid around $25 per month for a simple data and texting plan. And, I was able to add extra gigabytes of data as I needed per month.

RELATED: 8 Things You Need to Know About Traveling with a Smartphone

The one caveat is that your phone must be on the GSM network (most smartphones are) and unlocked for it to accept a different carrier’s SIM card. The steps for unlocking your phone vary by carrier and often change, so I recommend calling your provider or going into a store to follow the correct steps. Be wary of third parties that offer to unlock your phone; this may violate your contract with your carrier, so make sure to read your contract before considering this option.

Go This Route If … you’re traveling to one country for an extended period of time and want to use your phone as you normally would in the U.S.

Use your current carrier’s international plan

While these vary by carrier, many U.S. carriers will offer an international plan for travel abroad. They are often data-limiting and can get very expensive, but they’re still better than the going rates you’d pay without putting this package on your plan.

RELATED: How to Use a Smartphone in Europe

For example, on a recent trip to Colombia, I put on AT&T’s basic international package for $30 because I was only traveling for a week. I also knew I wouldn’t need access to a lot of data since I was going on a group tour with G Adventures and wouldn’t need to rely on Google Maps. I was very happy I had calling and data for one of the times I got lost from the group and needed a map. If I hadn’t placed this package on my phone I would have been charged over $100 even for the little amount of data I used.

Go This Route If … you just want access to data and calling in case of emergencies, but won’t be reliant on coverage. This is perfect if you plan to keep your phone in airplane mode and mainly use Wi-Fi.

Use a global coverage carrier

phone_italy

If you travel internationally more than five times a year, a switch to a global coverage carrier may be a good idea. Carriers like T-Mobile offer global coverage plans with unlimited data, but its service is more reliable in some countries than others. If you go this route, make sure the countries you travel to most often are covered on the carrier’s global coverage plan.

Go This Route If … you travel to the same international destinations frequently and know you can rely on a certain carrier for coverage.

Get a pre-paid phone for overseas calls

If you don’t mind going back to the (digital) Stone Age, using a simple pre-paid phone is a cheap and easy way to make calls and send/receive texts during your travels. Many international airports have a local carrier’s booth with phones and plans to choose from. So, if you don’t mind using buttons to text, this route can save you lots of money.

For a little more money, you can get a screen phone, which is obviously better if you’re planning to use the phone for everyday use. Most international phones will come already unlocked, so you can use it and purchase SIM cards for future trips. (Consider it an investment.)

Go This Route If … you just want a simple phone for texting and calling abroad or if you can’t get your phone unlocked and need a phone for everyday use.

Other alternatives

Personal hot spots have recently become a new option in the never-ending search for inexpensive Wi-Fi. They often are pricey, require additional day-passes for usage, and die quickly.

Go This Route If … you need a lot of data and are willing to pay daily charges (often times over $10 per day), and don’t mind carrying around the device.

SEE ALSO: Here’s the cheapest way to use your cell phone overseas

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NOW WATCH: How to stay safe while traveling abroad

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#UK OBAMA: ‘We have a pattern now of mass shootings … that has no parallel’

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barack obama cbs

President Barack Obama on Wednesday said a mass shooting in San Bernardino, California, is part of a deadly “pattern” of gun violence that has “no parallel in the world.”

In a brief preview of an interview with CBS that was set to air on Thursday morning, Obama reiterated his call for increased gun-safety laws, stronger background checks, and a ban on gun purchases for people on the TSA’s no-fly list.

“The one thing we do know is that we have a pattern now of mass shootings in this country that has no parallel anywhere else in the world,” Obama said in the interview, which was conducted shortly after he was briefed by his Homeland Security Adviser on the situation.

“We should come together on a bipartisan basis at every level to make these rare as opposed to normal,” he added. “We should never think that this is something that just happen in the ordinary course of events because this doesn’t happen with the same frequency in other countries.”

Though he cautioned against judging Wednesday’s shooting until all of the facts are clear, Obama has appeared increasingly exasperated at the failure of Congress to pass legislation aimed at curbing gun violence, despite multiple high-profile shootings in 2015 alone.

In a blunt speech after a shooting at an Oregon community college earlier this year that claimed 10 lives, Obama argued mass shootings should be “politicized” to illustrate the need for stricter gun measures.

“This is something we should politicize. It is relevant to our common life together,” Obama said from the White House. “This is a political choice we make to allow this to happen every few months in America.”

“Each time this happens, I’m going to bring this up. I am going to say that we can actually do something about it,” he said in closing his remarks.

As The Washington Post notesthere have been 351 mass shootings this year alone.

SEE ALSO: Updates on the shooting

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#UK How climate negotiations proceed: just like an action movie

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United Nations climate chief Christiana Figueres attends a news conference at the COP21, the United Nations Climate Change Conference Wednesday, Dec. 2, 2015 in Le Bourget, north of Paris. Figueres and French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius said Wednesday the climate talks are off to a good start thanks to 150 world leaders who came to Paris earlier this week, but now negotiations have to speed up and will get more complicated.  (AP Photo/Christophe Ena)

LE BOURGET, France (AP) — Attempts to inscribe a long-term goal to phase out carbon emissions in an envisioned global climate pact are facing pushback at U.N. talks from big developing countries including India and Brazil.

Negotiators from both countries said Wednesday they favor sticking to the already established goal of limiting global warming to 2 degrees C (3.6 degrees F) above pre-industrial times — a level that scientists say could avoid the worst impacts of climate change.

That goal was formally introduced in the U.N. talks in 2010. But many countries are calling for the Paris deal to include a road map on how to achieve it, such as a joint target for phasing out the emissions of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases blamed for global warming.

Various options have been proposed. The United States and other members of the Group of Seven wealthy countries earlier this year endorsed a “decarbonization of the global economy over the course of this century.”

“Decarbonization is something that has appeared recently. We don’t even know what that means,” Indian delegate Ajay Mathur told reporters. “Does it mean zero carbon? Does it mean net zero carbon?”

The term is generally understood to mean sharp reductions of carbon emissions from the burning of fossil fuels, but it hasn’t been defined precisely.

Brazil’s lead negotiator Antonio Marcondes told The Associated Press that there was no need to come up with a new joint climate goal.

“The long-term goal is already there: It’s 2 degree Celsius,” he said.

Marcondes added that Brazil would consider options that emphasize that phasing out fossil fuels will be easier for some countries than others. He referred to a joint Brazilian-German declaration in August that backed a “decarbonization of the global economy” while noting that some countries will need financial and technological help to make the transition to cleaner energy.

The long-term goal is one of the issues that split the larger group of developing countries in the climate talks. Oil-rich Saudi Arabia opposes wording calling for a phase-out of carbon emissions, while small island nations that face an existential risk from rising seas are among the strongest advocates. China has largely stayed silent.

It’s among the crunch issues that need to be resolved before negotiators can ink what would be the first climate deal to ask all countries to limit their greenhouse gas emissions. Another is how to ramp up the individual emissions targets that nations have proposed because scientific analyses show they’re not consistent with the 2-degree target.

“We must speed the process up because we have much work to do,” French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius told a news conference on Wednesday.

Fabius said negotiators need to come up with a new draft agreement by noon Saturday so that environment and foreign ministers have something to work with when they arrive for the second week of talks.

Speaking at a NATO conference in Brussels, U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry said he thought the climate talks “got off to an encouraging start” with 150 world leaders — the biggest ever gathering of heads of state and government — attending the opening day. Kerry is expected to join the meeting next week.

However, the talks have made little progress after the leaders left. At a stock-taking meeting Wednesday evening delegates noted that they had reached compromises on only a few of the scores of issues being negotiated.

That’s not unusual though in the climate talks, where compromises are typically reached only in the final hours.

U.N. climate chief Christiana Figueres said there was no reason to worry just yet.

Negotiations “will go through ups and downs,” she said. “There will be many commas inserted and many commas removed because that is the nature of this.”

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#UK Brazil speaker launches impeachment procedure against president

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Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff in Brasilia on November 22, 2015

Brasília (AFP) – Brazil’s lower house speaker triggered impeachment proceedings against President Dilma Rousseff on Wednesday, setting the stage for a political battle that could see the country’s first female leader forced from office.

“It’s to authorize the initiation (of impeachment), not to judge on its merits,” Speaker Eduardo Cunha told journalists after officially accepting an impeachment petition, which now goes to a committee which will decide whether or not to authorize a trial.

The petition, filed by opposition figures and a founder of Rousseff’s leftist Workers’ Party, accuses her of illegally fiddling government accounts to mask budget holes.

Cunha’s decision sparks a long and complex procedure that has to pass several legal hurdles before a full impeachment trial leading to a possible vote against Rousseff.

Experts are divided on whether she would survive, many calling the case against her relatively weak, but also noting her deep unpopularity among voters and tepid backing even from deputies and senators in her ruling coalition.

“I take no pleasure in carrying out this act,” Cunha said. “I am profoundly sorry this is happening.”

Cunha’s decision comes as the powerful politician faces a fight for his own political life, with the lower house debating whether he should be removed from his post because of corruption charges.

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#UK Fatalities in California shooting, suspects at large: official

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Survivors are evacuated from the scene of a shooting on December 2, 2015 in San Bernardino, California

San Bernardino (United States) (AFP) – There are an unknown number of fatalities in a shooting Wednesday in the California city of San Bernardino, and as many as three suspects still at large, an official said.

“I know there are fatalities. I don’t know the numbers on them,” Olivia Bozek, deputy public affairs officer for the San Bernardino County Sheriff’s Department, told MSNBC. “So far there’s one to three suspects that are still at large — nobody is in custody.”

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#UK Supreme Court blocks Native Hawaiian election vote count

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HONOLULU (AP) — The U.S. Supreme Court is blocking votes from being counted in a unique election that’s considered a major step toward self-governance for Native Hawaiians.

The high court on Wednesday granted an injunction requested by a group of Native Hawaiians and non-Hawaiians challenging the election. They argue Hawaii residents who don’t have Native Hawaiian ancestry are being excluded from the vote, in violation of their constitutional rights.

The order blocks the counting of votes until at least the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals issues its ruling. The group suing to stop the election appealed a district court’s ruling allowing voting to proceed.

The court’s four liberal justices say they would have allowed votes to be counted pending the appeal.

Election leaders extended voting to Dec. 21.

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#UK ‘San Francisco witch killer’ getting parole consideration

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In this Thursday, June 11, 2015 photo, Lisa Long lays out family photos of her sister Karen Barnes in Jonesboro, Ga. The married couple dubbed the “San Francisco witch killers” seemed locked away for good when each was sentenced to 75 years to life for three murders, including Barnes' 30 years ago. Because California prisons are under court order to ease severe overcrowding, a parole board will consider whether the wife Suzan Carson, 73, is fit for release Wednesday, Dec. 2. Long has traveled to Chino, Calif., to testify against Suzan’s release. “They are unrepentant,” Long said. (AP Photo/David Goldman)

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — One of two so-called “San Francisco witch killers” has been denied parole.

A parole board on Wednesday said 73-year-old Suzan Carson was unfit for early release. Carson and her husband were convicted of killing three in Northern California in the 1980s during a drug-fueled religious quest to rid the world of witches. They were each sentenced to 75 years to life.

Carson and 64-year-old Michael “Bear” Carson qualified for parole consideration after a federal court concerned with prison overcrowding ordered hearings for about 1,400 inmates older than 60 who have served more than 25 years of their sentences.

Michael Carson canceled his parole hearing in June, saying he refuses to renounce his violent religious beliefs.

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#UK UN to issue final report on Iran’s alleged nuke weapons work

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FILE - In this May 12, 2015 file photo, Director General of the International Atomic Energy Agency, IAEA, Yukiya Amano  speaks during an interview with The Associated Press in Vienna. This week, the bitter debate that for years pitted Iranian denials against U.S. claims of a cover-up is set for an anticlimactic ending, with a final report from the U.N.’s International Atomic Energy Agency expected to stop short of proving or disproving the claims.  (AP Photo/Ronald Zak, File)

VIENNA (AP) — Iran did work related to developing nuclear arms in the past, the U.N. atomic agency concluded in a report Wednesday that wraps up a near decade of investigations and opens the way to implementing a landmark deal aimed at reducing any future nuclear threat from Tehran.

Iran has consistently denied any interest in nuclear arms or past work on such weapons, and Iranian Deputy Foreign Minister Abbas Araqhchi told Iranian television that the International Atomic Energy Agency report “confirms the peaceful nature” Iran’s nuclear program.

But the report contested that view and came down on the side of U.S. allegations, saying the agency “assesses that a range of activities relevant to the development of a nuclear explosive device were conducted in Iran prior to the end of 2003 as a coordinated effort, and some activities took place” up to 2009.

At the same time, the report said any such work was restricted to “feasibility and scientific studies” that stopped short of the advanced development of such weapons.

It described its finding as an assessment and left a final ruling on whether the case should be closed in the hands of Washington and other leading nations represented on the IAEA’s 35-nation board. That decision is tentatively set for Dec. 15, when the board meets to decide whether to endorse the deal. Expected approval would close the IAEA investigation and fulfill a key requirement of the July 14 nuclear deal between Iran and six world powers.

That deal specifies that the agency must be in the position to wrap up the probe and deliver its views as a key condition for the start of an end to nuclear-related sanctions on Tehran. In exchange, Tehran must cut nuclear technologies that could be used in the future to build a bomb.

Beyond its drive for an end to all sanctions imposed on it over its atomic activities, Iran attaches huge importance to closing the books on the allegations in its drive to lift all punitive measures against it and wipe the slate clean over its nuclear program.

The report noted:

—the existence of an “organizational structure” prior to 2003 “suitable for the coordination of a range of activities relevant to the development of a nuclear explosive device.”

—development of detonators “relevant to a nuclear explosive device” while acknowledging that the devices also have “growing” civilian and conventional military uses.

—work on a separate explosives initiator that has “characteristics relevant to a nuclear explosive device, as well as to a small number of alternative applications.”

— environmental samples from a site that contravene Iranian assertions that the site was used for non-nuclear purposes. The agency strongly suspects Iran allegedly conducted tests of explosives meant to set off a nuclear charge at the location.

—no evidence of such work during a brief on-site inspection but determining that extensive construction work at the site previous to the inspections interfered with IAEA attempts to follow up on its suspicions.

The assessment noted Iran did not provide new information on some queries dating back to 2011 — when the IAEA first detailed its allegations — on work that in some cases seemed to have no other purpose but to make nuclear arms. In the case of “dual use” technologies that could be applied both for civilian and nuclear weapons programs, Iran said the experiments were civilian in nature or meant for conventional military purposes, the agency said.

In Washington, State Department spokesman Mark Toner described the report as “consistent with what the United States has long assessed — Iran had a nuclear weapons program that was halted in 2003.”

He also noted that the report fulfilled the conditions laid down in the July 14 nuclear deal. That agreement said that Iran must meet specific deadlines in cooperating with the IAEA in order for it to be able to wrap up its investigations by this month.

The U.S. has long urged that Iran not only trim its present nuclear program but also admit to what it says was past nuclear weapons work. Iran’s refusal to address those demands led since 2006 to a series of U.N. Security Council resolutions and sanctions against Tehran — and until recently the latent threat of U.S, and Israeli military strikes against Iran’s nuclear facilities.

Those threats diminished — and Washington’s priorities shifted — with the signing of the July 14 nuclear deal co-engineered by the United States and Iran and signed by five other nations at the table. The agreement commits Iran to cutting back for more than a decade on nuclear technologies that could be used for weapons-making in exchange for sanctions relief.

The long-standing U.S. mantra accused Iran of “deception and deceit,” on the weapons issue. As late as mid-June, Secretary of State John Kerry said the IAEA report must “resolve our questions about it with specificity” before any nuclear-related sanctions on Iran are lifted.

Just weeks later, however, Kerry said Washington is not “fixated on Iran specifically accounting for what they did at one point in time or another.” Instead, he said the U.S. is concerned about “going forward.”

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Associated Press writers Matthew Lee and Bradley Klapper contributed to this report.

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#UK Peterbilt recalls semis that go faster than tires can handle

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DETROIT (AP) — A truck manufacturer is recalling more than 2,000 semis because they reach speeds greater than their tires are built to handle.

The move by Peterbilt in the U.S. and Canada raises questions about the safety of thousands of other trucks on U.S. roads.

Peterbilt says in government documents that it’s recalling tractors from 2009 to 2016 because they can exceed 75 miles per hour, even though the maximum speed their Michelin tires can handle is 65 mph. The trucks mainly haul automobiles.

Peterbilt says the tires can fail and cause a crash. Dealers will reprogram computers so the trucks can’t go over 65.

The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration is encouraging other truck makers with similar risks to fix the problem. But the agency isn’t seeking more recalls.

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