TIME Environment

Midterm Elections Pass Four New Anti-Fracking Bans

Denton, Texas, passed high-profile ban on hydraulic fracturing

A record number of proposed bans to the controversial oil and gas drilling technique known as fracking were included on local ballots countrywide Tuesday. Out of eight proposed bans, four passed, in Ohio, Texas and California.

Perhaps the unlikeliest victory for anti-fracking activists was in Denton, Texas, a town north of Dallas situated in what one activist called the “cradle” of the U.S. oil and gas boom. The ban, which forbids the process of setting off large explosions underground in oil and gas drilling operations, passed with nearly 59% of the vote.

Denton is the first municipality in Texas to have passed a fracking ban–even despite heavy spending by the oil and gas industry to defeat the measure that the Denton Record Chronicle called it “the most expensive campaign in Denton’s history” by far.

“People in Denton rallied together and did some amazing organizing to pass a ban,” said Mark Schlosberg.

A legal challenge to the ban is all but assured, reports the Texas Tribune. Three of five similar bans passed in Colorado in recent years were overturned in local district court.

Fracking bans were also passed in Mendocino and San Benito counties in California, and in Athens, Ohio, while voters in Santa Barbara, California, and in the Ohio towns of Kent, Gates Mills and Youngstown rejected proposed fracking bans.

TIME society

The 17 Most Influential Mustaches of All Time

From Lanny McDonald to Salvador Dali, these mustaches were there when history was made

This Movember—the annual November-long happening in which men grow mustaches and raise money for men’s health causes—we celebrate mustaches throughout history. Why you ask? For thousands of years, mustaches have been present at pivotal historical moments. Lanny McDonald’s mustache became a hockey icon. Tom Selleck’s mustache defined sexy for a generation. The mustache’s influence on our culture, our history and thus our future is irrefutable.

It’s a bold claim to be sure but one from which we do not shy. These, gentle readers, are the most influential mustaches of all time.

TIME halloween

This Is the Best Post-Halloween Police Recap We’ve Seen

City of Santa Cruz

Fox News and a real life Edward Scissorhands and that’s not the end of it

Halloween is a night to get weird, and nowhere did weirdos celebrate the fact with more dedication this year than in Santa Cruz, California, according to a post-Halloween recap released by police.

In addition to what we assume are fairly typical shenanigans—the suspect in a one-car DUI crash throwing punches in the air as paramedics arrived on the scene, a drunk “prowler” found wandering in random backyards as he tried to find his way home—there were some particularly outstanding moments.

Sean Kory, 29, is alleged to have attacked a man dressed as a Fox News reporter, shouting as he did that he “hates Fox News.” What follows is the police release reprinted verbatim, because some things are not meant to be paraphrased.

“The suspect grabbed the victim’s microphone and placed [sic] down the front of his pants and proceeded to rub the microphone on his crotch. The suspect then attacked the victim with an aluminum tennis racquet.”

The victim was not injured. Sean Kory fled after the incident was reported but was apprehended by police. He has since found a small bit of Internet fame after being compared to the Hot Mugshot Guy.

In sadder news, a 12-year-old was “contacted” by police—the cops do not specify why—and found to be carrying a concealed hammer. Police say the kid already sports numerous gang tattoos and was already on probation and when he was arrested for possession of a weapon.

And finally, some glorious moron was issued a citation for “mutilation” of city property. He was dressed as Edward Scissor Hands and busted, police say, “doing some unauthorized trimming of the city trees.”

Stay weird, Santa Cruz.

TIME 2014 Election

Can Wikipedia Predict the Elections?

Alison Lundergan Grimes
Kentucky Democratic Senate candidate Alison Lundergan Grimes holds a mailer she asserted to be an illegal voter intimidation tactic as she rallies her supporters during a stop at the United Auto Workers hall in Bowling Green, Ky., Monday, Nov. 3, 2014. J. Scott Applewhite—AP

Your move, Nate Silver

You can almost picture it: The voter picks up the voter guide — or maybe even an absentee ballot — sits down at his or her computer and gets ready to decide the crucial Senate race. First stop: Wikipedia.

Yes, the community-edited online encyclopedia is hardly the most thorough (or fair) source of information on political candidates, but it’s not a bad start. (Hey, we’ve done it, and we’re professionals.)

So what does it tell us about the crucial Senate fights? A look at traffic statistics on Wikipedia over the last 30 days (using this website, which seems authoritative enough) seems to give a little more hope to Democrats than you might expect.

Now, keep a few things in mind. Nate Silver, the nerd king of big data prediction modeling, gives the Republican Party a 74.4% chance of taking the Senate. Lesser-known third-party candidates typically don’t have Wikipedia pages, while incumbents often have had them for longer than previously unknown challengers.

And the types of voters who look up candidates on Wikipedia may not be representative of voters overall.

All that said, here’s which candidates in key Senate races were looked up most on Wikipedia over the last month.

Arkansas

Tom Cotton (R) 14,899

Mark Pryor (D) 12,327

New Hampshire

Scott Brown (R) 34,563

Jeanne Shaheen (D) 18,400

Iowa

Joni Ernst (R) 39,895

Bruce Braley (D) 15,186

Colorado

Cory Gardner (R) 20,932

Mark Udall (D) 26,274

North Carolina

Thom Tillis (R) 20,176

Kay Hagan (D) 31,058

Alaska

Dan Sullivan (R) 7,446

Mark Begich (D) 12,084

Louisiana

Bill Cassidy (R) 9,942

Mary Landrieu (D) 23,952

Kansas

Pat Roberts (R) 14,960

Greg Orman (I) 33,965

Georgia

David Perdue (R) 17,147

Michelle Nunn (D) 30,896

Kentucky

Mitch McConnell (R) 40,072

Alison Lundergan Grimes (D) 41,546

So there you have it. Overall, the searches show Democrats being searched more in six of 10 key races, Republicans in three and an independent in one.

Science, people. Place your bets now.

TIME Crime

Subway Robbery Suspect Said ‘Jared’ Diet Failed

Zachary Torrance says he didn’t lose weight

The man suspected of robbing a string of Subway sandwich shops in Alabama told authorities he did it because the “Jared diet” didn’t work for him, and he wanted his money back.

Jared is the name of a man who became a spokesperson for Subway after he purportedly lost a significant amount of weight by going on a diet consisting solely of fare from the sandwich chain.

Zachary Torrance, 18, was arrested at a Hueytown, Alabama, Walmart, after a citizen matched his face to surveillance footage. Torrance is suspected in Subway store robberies in Birmingham, Midfield and Adamsville, WVTM Birmingham reports.

[WVTM]

TIME Baseball

San Francisco Braces For Giants’ World Series Parade

World Series Giants Baseball Celebration
San Francisco Giants baseball fans Megan McPhillips, right, and Travis Saracco from Santa Rosa, Calif., wait in the rain for the start of the victory parade for the 2014 World Series Champion San Francisco Giants on Friday, Oct. 31, 2014 in San Francisco. Jeff Chiu—AP

The parade from the Financial District to City Hall is expected to draw record crowds

Undaunted by forecasted chilly weather and steady rain, up to a million baseball fans are expected to crowd into downtown San Francisco Friday for a parade to commemorate the Giants’ third World Series win in five years.

The parade, which started at noon, will stretch for a mile and a half from Market and Steuart streets, then up McAllister Street to the steps of City Hall for a celebration including players, politicians and local celebrities.

The National Weather Service says conditions will be “uncomfortable” with steady rainfall and temperatures in the 50s, but organizers don’t expect fans to be deterred.

The Giants emerged victorious over the Kansas City Royals Wednesday after a tense match up that came down to a final pitch in game seven of the series. The fact that the celebration also falls on Halloween—a day for which orange and black-clad Giants fans will come already dressed appropriately—is expected to draw even more partiers to a wild street celebration.

Bay area transit operators expect Friday to be the busiest day ever on Bay Area trains.

[San Jose Mercury News]

TIME halloween

Here’s a Picture of North West All Dressed Up for Halloween

You're welcome

“My little stinker is waiting to show daddy her costume,” wrote Kim Kardashian, in the caption to one of her adorable Instagram posts featuring her daughter with Kanye West. “Halloween has started early this morning.”

TIME golf

Watch a Golfer Sink a 226-Yard Hole-In-One

Extraordinary shot put Lee Westwood in the running at the CIMB Classic

Some moments in sports are worth watching on repeat over and over again. On Friday, we got another.

Golfer Lee Westwood hit a spectacular 226-yard hole-in-one on the 11th hole at the Kuala Lumpur Golf and Country Club’s CIMB Classic, rocketing him into contention. The Englishman is currently at 3rd place to win the tournament’s $7,000,000 purse, behind Americans Bill Hurley III and Kevin Streelman.

A shot that good is always a pleasure to watch but Lee himself was, of course, more excited than anyone.

TIME ebola

Judge Rejects Maine’s Attempt to Forcibly Quarantine Ebola Nurse

A victory for Kaci Hickox

A judge in Maine rejected the state’s attempt to forcibly quarantine a nurse who has been clashing with officials over her defiance of a voluntary Ebola quarantine on Friday, reversing a court order that briefly mandated she avoid public places and transportation. The nurse still must continue daily temperature monitoring and approve travel with state officials, the judge ordered.

The order came Friday following a temporary order Thursday. The state has been pushing the nurse, Kaci Hickox, to follow quarantine guidelines laid out by federal officials for people at “some risk” of Ebola.

“I’m humbled today by the judge’s decision and even more humbled by the support that we have received from the town, the state of Maine, across the U.S. and even across the globe,” Hickox told reporters. “I know that Ebola is a scary disease. I have seen it face to face. I know that we are nowhere near winning this battle. We’ll only win this battle as we continue this discussion, as we gain a better collective understanding about Ebola and public health, as we overcome the fear and most importantly as we end the outbreak that is still ongoing in West Africa today.”

Maine Gov. Paul LePage described the decision as “unfortunate,” but promised to enforce it.

MORE: The CDC has less power than you think and likes it that way

Hickox, who recently returned from West Africa to Ebola patients suffering from the outbreak that has killed almost 5,000 people, went for a bike ride with her boyfriend Thursday in defiance of Maine’s voluntary quarantine guidelines. District Court Chief Judge Charles LaVerdiere cared for Ebola patients “generously, kindly and with compassion,” CNN reports. “We owe her and all professionals who give of themselves in this way a debt of gratitude,” he wrote in his decision.

Hickox has not shown any symptoms and has tested negative for the disease, which has a 21-day incubation period. She was fiercely critical of New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie when she was first quarantined on a state order there before being allowed to return home to Maine, calling it a violation of her human rights. Health advocates have criticized quarantine measures put in place as putting fear over science and potentially hampering efforts to contain the outbreak in West Africa by making it harder for health workers to travel to and from the region.

“I’m fighting for something much more than myself,” Hickox said this week. “There are so many aid workers coming back. It scares me to think how they’re going to be treated and how they’re going to feel.”

TIME

This Inspirational New LeBron James Ad Couldn’t Help Him Win His First Game Back Home

Maybe just watch it a few extra times next game, guys?

LeBron James laced up for his first home game back with the Cavaliers on Thursday night to face off against the New York Knicks. An inspirational Nike ad celebrating the city of Cleveland hit the airwaves the same night—but it wasn’t inspirational enough for LeBron, it seems.

Cleveland’s prodigal son played dismally in his first game with the Cavs in four years, and the Knicks came out on top, 95-90.

Despite the team’s performance, the Nike ad, which celebrates the spirt of Cavs fans and delivers a stirring “all in it together” message, was a widely-discussed success. The ad may not have pushed the Cavs over the top Thursday, but it helps complete LeBron’s return home after his controversial departure four years ago to play for the Miami Heat.

Maybe just watch it a few extra times next game, guys?

 

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