- LifestyleNextShark
Woman Discovers Her Son's Bride is Her Long Lost Daughter
A woman in eastern China had the shock of her life when she found out that her son was marrying her long-lost daughter. The reunion occurred right at the would-be spouses' wedding in Suzhou, Jiangsu province on March 31, according to Sohu News. The shocking discovery was made after the woman noticed a birthmark on the bride's hand, which looked strikingly similar to that of her long-lost child.
- CelebrityIn The Know
Woman exposes her date in secret note: 'If this is your man, he's cheating'
A woman on TikTok suspected her date may have a girlfriend after what she found in his bathroom.
- SportsMiami Herald
Falcons No. 4 pick is available in trade. News why that could be good (or bad) for Dolphins
The Atlanta Falcons, holding the No. 4 overall selection in the first round of the coming NFL Draft, have indeed been taking phone calls from other teams inquiring about trading up to that spot, The Miami Herald has confirmed.
- PoliticsHuffPost
Ex-Trump Lawyer’s Claim About Not Worshipping Him Goes Up In Holy Smoke
"Lol... you people have literally said Trump was sent by God," one critic hit back at Jenna Ellis.
- WorldThe Week
Newly disclosed CIA memo reveals U.S. concealed high-ranking Nazi's role in Holocaust so he could serve as a Cold War asset
In the years following World War II, the United States and West Germany jointly worked to conceal a high-ranking Nazi official's role in deporting tens of thousands of Jews, newly disclosed intelligence records obtained by German public broadcaster ARD reveal, per The New York Times. Franz Josef Huber led a large section of the Gestapo — Adolf Hitler's secret police — that stretched across Austria, and his forces worked closely with Adolf Eichmann on the coordination of the deportation of Jews to concentration and extermination camps. Eichmann, famously, was tried and executed in Israel in 1962 for his role in the Holocaust, but Huber dodged that fate, even though he was arrested by American forces in 1945. He was released in 1948 and continued to live out his days in Munich, seemingly avoiding responsibility altogether because he was seen as a potential Cold War asset. The CIA, for example, believed he could help recruit agents in the Soviet bloc. As one memo from 1953 reads, the agency was "by no means unmindful of the dangers involved in playing around with a Gestapo general," but "we also believe, on the basis of the information now in our possession, that Huber might be profitably used by this organization." The West German intelligence service, the BND, gave him a cover story, and it took 20 years before the agency decided "they could no longer tolerate the connection," the Times writes. While Huber's story may stand out because of his significant standing within the Third Reich, Prof. Shlomo Shpiro of Israel's Bar-Ilan University explained that "Western intelligence services struggled to recruit reliable anti-communist contacts," which meant they frequently ignored the backgrounds of potential assets. "Many former Nazis took advantage of the new communist threat to secure for themselves both immunity from war crimes prosecution and hefty salaries from U.S. and West German intelligence agencies," he said. Read more at The New York Times. More stories from theweek.comJanet Yellen's proposal to revolutionize corporate taxationDonors must show negative COVID test results to attend Republican National Committee spring retreatReport: Matt Gaetz sought a preemptive pardon from Trump

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