The Three Stooges were an American vaudeville and comedy act of the early to mid-20th century best known for their numerous short subject films. Their hallmark was physical farce and extreme slapstick. In films, the Stooges were commonly known by their first names: "Moe, Larry, and Curly" or "Moe, Larry, and Shemp," among other lineups.
The act started as Ted Healy and his Southern Gentlemen, consisting of Moe Howard, his brother Shemp, and Larry Fine. This threesome did one feature film entitled Soup to Nuts before Shemp left to pursue a solo career. He was replaced by his brother Curly and the trio became The Three Stooges.
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Adam was first, and correct, with:
The Three Stooges.
That was my guess, but I had no expectation to be right.
Marian said:
three stooges... my brother loved watching them but I thought they were stupid.. I was about 14 then and he was nine.
Charlie wrote:
The Three Stooges.
Traumatized Lois Of Oregon responded:
Learned me some today about The Three Stooges, though I was
never a big fan of theirs. Stooge humor is too subtle, and
the screaming and hitting and verbal abuse just reminded me
of my mother. In addition, there's not a looker in the
bunch. Shemp just made my flesh crawl. He resembled the
Greasy Old Uncle all the kids on the block were warned not
to be alone with. Urgh. Just thinking about him makes me
want a shower. I need to look at a picture of Groucho now to
make me feel all warm and fuzzy again.
Alan J answered:
The Three Stooges
Rob P replied:
That would be the Three Stooges! I learned that at the Three Stooges Museum in Ambler Pennsylvania!
Jim from CA, retired to ID, said:
The Three Stooges
Sally is tending her pgk's.
Dale of Diamond Springs, Back to Norfallcali, responded:
Another one I am aware of deeply from my head full of trivialities and trifles. Moe Howard, Larry Fine and the useless Shemp were "Ted Healy and his Southern Gentlemen". Thank god Shemp quit to pursue his own career so that the true comical genius, my inspirational hero, Curly Howard could be the driving force behind what later turned out to be "The Three Stooges". Sally, don't you dare berate my Man!
DJ Useo answered:
The answer is The Three Stooges. I get a big kick out of their humor.
When I watched them growing up, the episodes were always poorly edited.
Nowadays, you can enjoy the uncut, restored versions. Wot a treat!
Nyuk! Nyuk! Nyuk!
MAM wrote:
The Three Stooges ~ Moe Howard, Curly Howard and Larry Fine
BttbBob replied:
It's our E! pal SallyP's fa-vo-rite comedic troupe...
(AHAHAHAHAHAHAAAA!!!)... at least I think I remember her extolling their talents and virtues... but, I may be wrong... it's happened before...
No matter, though! Ain't that a grand photo?
~~~~~
Bruce link Comment - I'm in agreement with Bart that sometimes Ted Rall-is-off-the-wall. But, Rall's screed on kids not wanting to study engineering is spot on in many areas. Particularly the visa thing for foreign scientists/engineers. Despite that, this area here has two small universities and a very large community college that have a heavy technical emphasis. Delta College has a great program for solar/wind technologists that is fully attended... Oh, and the world HQ's for both Dow and Dow Corning are right next door. They and the heavy presence of GM support all the technical programs... A high school classmate of my older daughter is a 30 year old PhD Chemist at Corning and makes BIG BUCKS... I congratulate any young person I meet that is taking any engineering program... we need to start building things again... Fact.
~~~~~
The Detroit Lions are about to play on "Monday Night Football"... That hasn't happened, in like, a bazillion years... So, gotta go...
And, Joe S said:
Ya know when I was a kid, about 11 or 12 years old, I loved The Three Stooges. That's who their humor is designed for, young boys no older than 13. When we lived near Muskegon we could pick up 3 TV stations and every day you could see The Three Stooges on one of the channels. When we moved back up North we lived high on a hill near Lake Michigan. We could only receive one channel from Michigan, channel 13, but we could pick up 5 channels from Wisconsin. We could watch The Three Stooges several times a day, every day. After a while it got old.
The best thing about watching Wisconsin TV is that Wisconsin would observe Daylight Savings Time in the Summer and Michigan didn't so their time was the same as ours. That meant their TV shows came on an hour early and we could watch the Tonight show with Steve Allen. But I digress..
For those interested, real Wizards build their own wands. Buying your wand from a wandmaker is quicker and easier, but you get an inferior product. It's ok for kids to buy a wand, but if you want the real thing make it yourself. You must remember Harry Potter stories are just that, stories. Of course they are good stories, and there is a lot of truth contained in the books, but a lot of misdirection also.
CBS begins the night with a FRESH'NCIS', followed by a FRESH'NCIS: The 2nd One', then a FRESH'Person Of Interest'.
Scheduled on a FRESHDave are Paul Rudd, Cristin Milioti, a Top Ten List presented by Barbara Walters, and Alt-J.
Scheduled on a FRESHCraig are Alyssa Milano and Wilford Brimley.
NBC starts the night with a FRESH'Biggest Loser', followed by a FRESH'The Voice'.
Scheduled on a FRESHLeno are Olivia Wilde, Julie Scardina, and Johnny Mathis.
On a RERUNJimmy Fallon (from 10/8/13) is Miley Cyrus.
On a RERUNCarson 'The Scab' Daly (from 11/6/13) are Eric Andre and Chrome Sparks.
ABC opens the night with a RERUN'Marvel's Agents Of SHIELD', followed by a RERUN'The Goldbergs', then a RERUN'Trophy Wife'. followed by 'What Would You Do?'.
Scheduled on a FRESHJimmy Kimmel are Mark Wahlberg, Bruce Dern, and Polica.
The CW offer a RERUN'The Originals', followed by a RERUN'Supernatural'.
Scheduled on a FRESHArsenio Hall are Tom Selleck, Judge Greg Mathis, and Ashanti.
Faux has a RERUN'Dads', followed by a RERUN'Brooklyn Nine-Nine', then a RERUN'New Girl', followed by a RERUN'The Mindy Project'.
MY recycles an old 'Bones', followed by another old 'Bones'.
A&E has 'Storage Wars', another 'Storage Wars', still another 'Storage Wars', yet another 'Storage Wars', followed by a FRESH'Storage Wars Texass', then another FRESH'Storage Wars Texass', followed by a FRESH'Shipping Wars', then another FRESH'Shipping Wars'.
AMC offers the movie 'Bring It On', followed by the movie 'Home Alone 2: Lost In New York', then the movie 'Home Alone 2: Lost In New York', again.
BBC -
[6:00AM] BBC WORLD NEWS
[7:00AM] BBC WORLD NEWS
[8:00AM] DOCTOR WHO - Season 4 - Ep 9 - Forest of the Dead
[9:00AM] TORCHWOOD - Season 2 - Ep 12 - Fragments
[10:00AM] STAR TREK: THE NEXT GENERATION - Season 7 - Ep 22 - Bloodlines
[11:00AM] STAR TREK: THE NEXT GENERATION - Season 7 - Ep 23 - Emergence
[12:00PM] STAR TREK: THE NEXT GENERATION - Season 7 - Ep 24 - Preemptive Strike
[1:00PM] RAMSAY'S KITCHEN NIGHTMARES US - Season 3 - Ep 2 - PJ's Steakhouse
[2:00PM] RAMSAY'S KITCHEN NIGHTMARES REVISITED UK - Season 2 - Ep 1 - Revisited: La Riviera
[3:00PM] RAMSAY'S KITCHEN NIGHTMARES US - Season 1 - Ep 4 - Finn McCool's
[4:00PM] TOP GEAR - Season 11 - Episode 2
[5:00PM] TOP GEAR - Season 11 - Episode 3
[6:00PM] STAR TREK: THE NEXT GENERATION - Season 5 - Ep 21 - The Perfect Mate
[7:00PM] STAR TREK: THE NEXT GENERATION - Season 5 - Ep 22 - Imaginary Friend
[8:00PM] STAR TREK: THE NEXT GENERATION - Season 5 - Ep 23 - I, Borg
[9:00PM] STAR TREK: THE NEXT GENERATION - Season 5 - Ep 24 - The Next Phase
[10:00PM] STAR TREK: THE NEXT GENERATION - Season 5 - Ep 25 - The Inner Light
[11:00PM] ATLANTIS - Season 1 - Episode 4
[12:00AM] STAR TREK: THE NEXT GENERATION - Season 5 - Ep 24 - The Next Phase
[1:00AM] STAR TREK: THE NEXT GENERATION - Season 5 - Ep 25 - The Inner Light
[2:00AM] DOCTOR WHO - Season 2 - Ep 9 - The Satan Pit
[3:00AM] DOCTOR WHO - Season 2 - Ep 10 - Love & Monsters
[4:00AM] DOCTOR WHO - Season 2 - Ep 11 - Fear Her
[5:00AM] DOCTOR WHO - Season 2 - Ep 12 - Army of Ghosts (ALL TIMES EST)
Bravo has 'Shahs Of Sunset', 'Real Housewives Of Atlanta', another 'Real Housewives Of Atlanta', followed by a FRESH'Killer Contact'.
Comedy Central has last night's 'Colbert Report', last night's 'Jon Stewart', 'Key & Peele', another 'Key & Peele', 'Tosh.0', another 'Tosh.0', still another 'Tosh.0', and yet another 'Tosh.0'.
Scheduled on a FRESHJon Stewart is Erik Prince (R-Spawn Of Satan).
Scheduled on a FRESHColbert Report are Garry Trudeau, Cyndi Lauper, and Alan Cumming.
FX has '2½ Men', another '2½ Men', followed by the movie 'Transformers: Revenge Of The Fallen'.
IFC -
[6:00AM] Whitest Kids U'Know
[6:15AM] Malcolm in the Middle-Health Insurance
[6:45AM] Malcolm in the Middle-Reese vs. Stevie
[7:15AM] Malcolm in the Middle-Halloween
[7:45AM] Malcolm in the Middle-Jessica Stays Over
[8:15AM] Malcolm in the Middle-Secret Boyfriend
[8:45AM] Malcolm in the Middle-Blackout
[9:15AM] Malcolm in the Middle-Army Buddy
[9:45AM] Malcolm in the Middle-Malcolm Defends Reese
[10:15AM] Malcolm in the Middle-Malcolm's Money
[10:45AM] Malcolm in the Middle-Bride of Ida
[11:15AM] Malcolm in the Middle-College Recruiters
[11:45AM] Hanna
[2:00PM] Monty Python's The Meaning of Life
[4:30PM] The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford
[8:00PM] The Fugitive
[10:45PM] Once Upon a Time in Mexico
[1:00AM] Once Upon a Time in Mexico
[3:15AM] The Fugitive (ALL TIMES EST)
Sundance -
[6:00AM] The Freshman
[8:15AM] Amadeus
[12:15PM] The New World
[3:15PM] Changing Lanes
[5:30PM] Donnie Darko
[8:00PM] Cujo
[10:00PM] Alien
[12:30AM] Vanilla Sky
[3:30AM] Changing Lanes
[5:45AM] This Way Up (ALL TIMES EST)
SyFy has the movie 'Star Trek II: The Wrath Of Khan', followed by a FRESH'Haunted Highway', then a FRESH'Killer Contact'.
TBS:
Scheduled on a FRESHConan are Tom Hanks, the Head and the Heart.
More entertainers have cancelled their appearances at SeaWorld Orlando following the recent release of a documentary that raises questions about the effects of captivity on whales.
Representatives for Trisha Yearwood and Martina McBride confirmed Monday that the country singers have joined the ranks of recording artists who have pulled out of performing at the park's February concert series, Bands, Brew and BBQ.
They joined Barenaked Ladies, Willie Nelson and Heart in cancelling their appearances.
The documentary, "Blackfish," explores what may have caused a 12,000-pound orca named Tilikum to kill veteran SeaWorld trainer Dawn Brancheau in 2010. Tilikum pulled her into a pool. The orca was also involved in two other deaths.
The Television Academy is adding six new members to its Hall of Fame, including former "Seinfeld" star Julia Louis-Dreyfus and Jay Leno.
The academy's Hall of Fame selection committee announced the list of inductees for 2014 on Monday.
Louis-Dreyfus is a four-time Emmy Award winner and Leno is known as the host of the "Tonight Show." They'll be joined by media magnate right-wing propagandist Rupert Murdoch (R-Evil Incarnate), writer-producer David E. Kelley and network executive Brandon Stoddard.
Sound pioneer Ray Dolby will be inducted posthumously.
Snowy owls - large, fluffy, white birds typically found in the Arctic and rarely seen south of the Great Lakes - have swooped down upon the eastern United States in greater numbers than at any time in at least 50 years, one bird expert says. The owls have been spotted as far south as Bermuda, the Carolinas and Missouri, according to news reports.
This migration of snowy owls southward is called an irruption, and this is the "largest of its kind in recent memory," said Kevin McGowan, a bird expert at the Cornell Laboratory of Ornithology at Cornell University.
Snowy owls - the same species as Hedwig, Harry Potter's fictional letter-carrying bird - are magnificent to behold, standing 3 feet (1 meter) tall and sporting a 5-foot (1.5 m) wingspan. "Snowy owls are an Arctic bird adapted to live at the top of the world, and they usually spend the winter up there," as well as the summer, McGowan told LiveScience's OurAmazingPlanet.
But why are these birds showing up in such large numbers in the Midwest and eastern United States? Typically, such winter migrations take place when the owls' food - mainly rodents, such as lemming - are unavailable. Although nobody knows yet why there are so many snowy owls showing up this year, it could be due to a crash in these lemming populations, or because the rodents are more difficult to hunt when there is more snow on the ground, McGowan said. In addition, more snowy owls may have been born this year compared to in other years, leading to more competition for finite food resources, he said. But scientists likely won't know for a while what factor or factors are behind the large irruption this year.
For bird lovers, now is the perfect opportunity to spot snowy owls, McGowan said - he has seen 10 in the past week alone in upstate New York. Curious bird watchers can see if there have been any sightings near them using eBird.org, a tool developed at the Cornell Lab of Ornithology. People can also report their own sightings on the site, he said.
James Cameron will be returning to New Zealand to film three sequels to "Avatar," his enormously popular movie about the blue inhabitants of Pandora.
The director made the announcement Monday in the capital Wellington with producer Jon Landau and Prime Minister John Key. The films will be made by Lightstorm Entertainment and Twentieth Century Fox.
"Avatar," released in 2009 and shot in New Zealand, won three Academy Awards and is the highest-grossing film in history, with an international box office take of nearly $2.8 billion.
Cameron said he plans to complete principal shooting on the three movies at one time, perhaps over a period of about nine months and beginning in 2015. He said the aim is to release the first sequel in time for Christmas 2016 and the following sequels in late 2017 and late 2018.
New Zealand's government has agreed to a 25 percent rebate for the films, meaning it will pick up one-quarter of the tab. The agreement states that Lightstorm and Twentieth Century Fox will spend at least $413 million in New Zealand on the movies.
A jury should honor Farrah Fawcett's wishes and force Ryan O'Neal to hand over a portrait of the late actress done by Andy Warhol to the University of Texas at Austin, a lawyer for the school argued Monday.
The Oscar-nominated actor's attorney, however, urged jurors to allow O'Neal to keep the portrait, calling the university's pursuit of the artwork a case of greed that contradicted what Fawcett told friends about its ownership.
The lawyers made their cases during closing arguments in the case. Jurors began deliberating later Monday then left for the day without reaching a verdict.
Fawcett's image was displayed throughout closing arguments by university attorney David Beck and O'Neal's attorney Marty Singer. For much of Singer's arguments, an actual-size copy of the 40-inch by 40-inch Warhol portrait was displayed within a few feet of jurors.
A demonstrator holds a sign outside the main branch of the New York City Public Library to protest against the library's controversial renovation plans in midtown Manhattan, December 16, 2013. The demonstrators rallied against plans to move a large part of the New York Public Library's research collection to storage in New Jersey and sell off the library's hugely popular midtown Manhattan branch.
Photo by Mike Segar
A judge has revoked Chris Brown's probation because of his arrest for allegedly hitting a man in Washington, D.C., earlier this year.
Los Angeles Superior Court Judge James R. Brandlin ordered Brown on Monday to return to court Feb. 10 for another update. The judge told Brown he is still required to perform 1,000 hours of community labour as part of his sentence for the beating his then-girlfriend Rihanna in 2009.
Brown was also ordered to stay in rehab. Brandlin said probation officials reported that Brown is doing well in treatment.
The Grammy-winning singer was arrested in October after a man accused the R&B singer of hitting him after he tried to get a photo with the star.
A French midwife, wearing a stork hat, attends a national protest demonstration in Paris, December 16, 2013. Midwives, gathered under the 'Storks movement, have been on strike in France for two months, demanding salary increases and better recognition by hospitals who employ them.
Photo by Charles Platiau
The fate of a $1.2 billion lawsuit accusing ABC News of damaging a beef producer's profits and reputation through its reports about a controversial product dubbed by critics as "pink slime" might be determined this week.
Oral arguments on whether Beef Products Inc of Dakota Dunes, South Dakota, should be able to pursue its case against ABC, a unit of Walt Disney Co, are set for December 17 before Judge Cheryle Gering in a state court in Elk Point, South Dakota.
Once among the top producers of " lean finely textured beef ground offal," BPI said ABC News reports beginning in March 2012 cost it $400 million of profit by misleading consumers into believing the product is unsafe.
Other defendants include star ABC News anchor Diane Sawyer, two reporters who covered the story in March and April 2012, and two former U.S. Department of Agriculture employees and a former BPI employee who were interviewed and quoted in ABC's coverage.
Actual damages could be tripled if ABC News were found liable under South Dakota's Agricultural Food Products Disparagement Act. BPI is also seeking punitive damages.
A man dressed in traditional Ukrainian Cossack clothes walks near a barricade during a rally in Independence Square in central Kiev, December 16, 2013. The opposition went ahead with preparations for another big rally for Tuesday against what they see as moves by President Viktor Yanukovich to sell out national interests to Russia after backing away from a landmark deal with the European Union that would have shifted their country westwards.
Photo by Gleb Garanich
A former candidate for governor of Oregon was sentenced to six years in prison on Monday for fraudulently convincing investors he had access to shares of Facebook Inc before its highly anticipated initial public offering in 2012.
Craig Berkman, who ran unsuccessfully for governor in 1994 as a Republican, told investors he would use their money to buy pre-IPO shares in Facebook and other companies like LinkedIn Corp, Groupon Inc and Zynga Inc.
Instead, he used new investor money to pay off earlier investors and to fund his own expenses, including nearly $6 million to help satisfy a settlement with a firm that accused him of failing to pay his debts, U.S. authorities said.
In June, Berkman pleaded guilty in federal court in New York to securities and wire fraud and agreed to forfeit more than $13 million he raised from more than 120 investors, including longtime friends.
Berkman, a businessman and the former head of the Oregon Republican Party, will also be required to make restitution of approximately $11 million, according to prosecutors.
A woman shows Yamari or Yomari after she makes one, a day before the Yamari Puni festival in Kathmandu December 16, 2013. The name "Yamari Puni" originated form Newari words, "ya" meaning like, "mari" meaning delicacy and "puni" meaning full moon. People from Newar community celebrate this festival once a year during the full moon by performing traditional songs, dance and preparing Yamari also called Yomari, a confection of rice flours to be consumed specially during this day.
Photo by Navesh Chitrakar
A winter wonderland-themed wedding arrived in San Francisco on Sunday as former "Real Housewives of D.C." star Michaele Salahi married Journey guitarist Neal Schon. And, like any good reality TV stars, they decided to broadcast their nuptials to the world.
But this inside peek into marital bliss came with a twist; it was the world's first-ever Pay-Per-View wedding. Titled the "Winter Wonderland Wedding and Music Event," the celebration at the Palace of Fine Arts (the first wedding ever at the venue) began at 5 p.m. PT and used 10 cameras to capture all the action. The ceremony took place under the venue's historical Rotunda.
It's still unclear how many folks tuned in as the numbers aren't being released yet, but intrigued viewers can still buy the event for $14.95 via video-on-demand anytime until Feb. 28. Once purchased, it can be watched for up to 12 hours, although the full show can only be watched once upon purchase. A portion of the profits from the event will go to typhoon relief, as Journey's new lead singer, Arnel Pineda, is from the Philippines.
The "I do's" took place in a white tent decorated with 36 crystal chandeliers. The guest list surpassed 350, and the wedding party included a whopping 25 bridesmaids and 25 groomsmen, as well as celebrities including Sammy Hagar, Omarosa Manigault, Bob Weir of The Grateful Dead, and Diane Dimond. Oprah's favorite pastor, Rev. Michael Beckwith, officiated the surprise-filled ceremony orchestrated by celebrity wedding planner Sharon Sacks.
Audrey Totter, the radio actress who became a silver screen star by playing femme fatales in 1940s film noir including "Lady in the Lake," has died.
Totter's daughter, Mea Lane, tells the Los Angeles Times that her mother died Thursday at a Los Angeles hospital. She was 95 and had recently had a stroke.
Totter was under contract with MGM starting in 1944. After landing a small part in "The Postman Always Rings Twice," Totter went on to a series of roles as tough-talking blondes.
Her breakthrough came with "Lady in the Lake," the 1947 adaptation of Raymond Chandler's Philip Marlowe detective tale. She also appeared in the thriller "The Unsuspected" and the boxing drama "The Set-Up."
After retiring to raise a family, Totter later resurfaced on television.
Ray Price, one of country music's most popular and influential singers and bandleaders who had more than 100 hits and was one of the last living connections to Hank Williams, died Monday. He was 87.
Price was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer in 2011 and it had recently spread to his liver, intestines and lungs, according East Texas Medical Center in Tyler. He stopped aggressive treatments and left the hospital last Thursday to receive hospice care at home.
At the time, his wife, Janie Price, relayed what she called her husband's "final message" to his fans: "I love my fans and have devoted my life to reaching out to them. I appreciate their support all these years, and I hope I haven't let them down. I am at peace. I love Jesus. I'm going to be just fine. Don't worry about me. I'll see you again one day."
Perhaps best known for his version of the Kris Kristofferson song "For the Good Times," a pop hit in 1970, the velvet-voiced Price was a giant among traditional country performers in the 1950s, '60s and '70s, as likely to defy a trend as he was to defend one. He helped invent the genre's honky-tonk sound early in his career, then took it in a more polished direction.
He reached the Billboard Hot 100 eight times from 1958-73 and had seven No. 1 hits and more than 100 titles on the Billboard country chart from 1952 to 1989. "For the Good Times" was his biggest crossover hit, reaching No. 11 on the Billboard pop music singles chart. His other country hits included "Crazy Arms," ''Release Me," ''The Same Old Me," ''Heartaches by the Number," ''City Lights" and "Too Young to Die."
Price was elected to the Country Music Hall of Fame in 1996, long after he had become dissatisfied with Nashville and returned to his home state of Texas.
His importance went well beyond hit singles. He was among the pioneers who popularized electric instruments and drums in country music. After helping to establish the bedrock 4/4 shuffle beat that can still be heard on every honky-tonk jukebox and most country radio stations in the world, Price angered traditionalists by breaking away from country. He gave early breaks to Willie Nelson, Roger Miller and other major performers.
Like Nelson, his good friend and contemporary, Price simply didn't care what others thought and pursued the chance to make his music the way he wanted to.
"I have fought prejudice since I got in country music and I will continue to fight it," he told The Associated Press in 1981. "A lot of people want to keep country music in the minority of people. But it belongs to the world. It's art."
In 2007, he joined buddies Merle Haggard and Willie Nelson on a double-CD set, "Last of the Breed." The trio performed on tour with the Texas swing band Asleep at the Wheel.
Over the years, Price came in and out of vogue as traditional country music waxed and waned on the radio. He was a constant advocate for the old days and ways of country music, and more recently re-entered the news when he took offence to comments Blake Shelton made about classic country music that included the words "old farts." The dustup drew attention on the Internet and introduced Price to a new generation of country fans.
"You should be so lucky as us old-timers," Price said in a happily cantankerous post in all capital letters. "Check back in 63 years (the year 2075) and let us know how your name and your music will be remembered."
Price was born near Perryville, Texas, in 1926 and was raised in Dallas. He joined the Marines for World War II and then studied to be a veterinarian at North Texas Agricultural College before he decided on music as a career.
Soft-spoken and urbane, Price told the AP in 1976: "I'm my own worst critic. I don't like to hear myself sing or see myself on television. I see too many mistakes."
A pair of 10-day-old sibling lion cubs are seen in their play area at the San Diego Zoo and Safari Park animal care center in San Diego, California, in this December 16, 2013 handout provided by the San Diego Zoo and Safari Park. The brother and sister, whose mother Oshana was not giving them the attention they need to thrive, are receiving bottles of formula every two hours from animal care staff, according to the zoo.
Photo by Ken Bohn/San Diego Zoo/Handout via Reuters
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