The Daily Citizen, Dalton, GA

Daily Updates

November 22, 2009

Rare Charles Darwin book found on toilet bookshelf

LONDON (AP) — An auction house says it is selling a rare first edition of Charles Darwin’s “On the Origin of Species” found in a family’s guest lavatory in southern England.

Christie’s auction house said Sunday the book — one of around 1,250 copies first printed in 1859 — had been on a toilet bookshelf at a family’s home in Oxford.

The book will be auctioned on Tuesday, the 150th anniversary of the publication of the famous work. Christie’s said the book is likely to sell for 60,000 pounds ($99,000).

Darwin’s “The Origin of Species” outlined his theory of natural selection, the foundation for the modern understanding of evolution.

Celebrations around the world this year have marked the 200th anniversary of Darwin’s birth.

Daily Updates
  • Fargo residents learn from mistakes in flood fight

    Before this flood season, officials in Fargo asked homeowners to clear paths in their yards so that firm and straight walls of sandbags could be placed to protect their homes. One resident cut down his tree. Another went so far to use a torch to melt the ice off his ground.

    March 19, 2010

  • Medical marijuana a frequent target for criminals

    Patients, growers and clinics in some of the 14 states that allow medical marijuana are falling victim to robberies, home invasions, shootings and even murders at the hands of pot thieves.

    March 19, 2010

  • Pa. suspect is rare US woman facing terror trial

    If the woman dubbed “Jihad Jane” goes on trial, she would become just the second American woman tried on U.S. soil on terrorism charges — and the first accused of directly working toward a Muslim holy war.

    March 19, 2010

  • Md. lawmakers not feeling so Southern anymore

    Maryland’s official song may include a line about “Northern scum” left over from the Civil War era, but the state isn’t feeling so Southern anymore.

    March 19, 2010

  • SC gov agrees to pay ethics fine, gets divorced

    South Carolina Gov. Mark Sanford has closed two chapters of his life, agreeing to pay $74,000 in fines to resolve ethics charges brought against him after last summer’s revelation of an extramarital affair, and receiving word that a judge had formally ended his 20-year marriage to his wife, Jenny.

    March 19, 2010

  • Doctor says heart groups too cozy with industry

    A prominent cardiologist accused leading heart organizations of being too cozy with industry and allowing those ties to influence its policies and education programs for doctors.

    March 17, 2010

  • Woman hit with rock in car dies

    Authorities say a South Carolina woman initially left in critical condition after she was struck by a rock that flew through her windshield when a pickup truck hit a pothole along Interstate 20 near the Alabama-Georgia line Monday has died.

    March 17, 2010

  • PepsiCo cuts sugary drinks from schools worldwide

    PepsiCo plans to remove sugary drinks from schools worldwide, following the success of programs in the U.S. aimed at cutting down on childhood obesity.

    March 17, 2010

  • Woods will return to golf at Masters on April 8

    For Tiger Woods, this figures to be a Masters like no other.

    March 17, 2010

  • Ivy League’s Cornell responds to 3 gorge deaths

    Cornell University, an Ivy League school known for its spectacular gorges and haunted by a reputation for suicides, took the extraordinary step of posting lookouts on bridges and going door-to-door to check on students after three undergrads plunged to their deaths in the past month.

    March 17, 2010

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