Ball shells up, steps into range and catches Figueroa clean with a left hook. Another one lands soon after. The referee calls a pause to the action and gives Ball a warning for using his forearm.
Tom Bowen is a senior editor who loves adventure games and RPGs. He's been playing video games for several decades now and writing about them professionally since 2020. Although he dabbles in news and ...
Syracuse, N.Y. — JJ Starling cocked his arm back preparing to deliver the type of tomahawk dunk that, in years past, would have sent second-half shockwaves to every segment of the dome. Out alone on a ...
Of all the bird sounds we hear in our region during winter, the call of the western screech owl may be the most bizarre. Despite the owl’s name, it doesn’t screech, nor does it go hoo-hoo-hoo. Instead ...
The Times Square New Year's Eve ball is all set to make its 60-second descent down the 139-foot pole at 11:59 p.m. on Wednesday, Dec. 31, to usher in 2026. At exactly 11:59 p.m. ET, the Mayor of New ...
A Disney employee threw himself in front of a runaway rubber boulder, injuring himself as he shielded guests from the 400-pound prop during an Indiana Jones themed attraction, officials at the Florida ...
For the first time ever, New York’s venerable New Year’s Eve ball drop, a Times Square spectacle every year since 1907, will happen twice in a single year. The Constellation Ball, the ninth and ...
The first known game incorporating graphics that updated in real time, rather than only when the player made a move, was a simulation of a bouncing ball created by Massachusetts Institute of ...
For millions of people, the year 2026 will begin once a crystal-covered ball, 12.5 feet in diameter, makes its descent in New York City's Times Square. New York Times owner Adolph Ochs organized the ...
This year's crystal ball in Times Square drop to celebrate 2026 will feature a patriotic touch for America's 250th birthday. The ball will sparkle in red, white and blue to usher in the new year and ...
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Endless bouncing balls
A physics demonstration shows how bouncing balls can appear to keep moving endlessly, explaining the energy transfer and motion behind the effect. Real-life Haribo! Ultra-rare two-headed snake named ...
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