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CBS News The picture of Martin Richard was taken after a school project last April. Today, it is heartbreaking. Boston Marathon bombing victim Martin Richard. Lucia Brawley / Personal Photo In Dorch
stanley termos ester, Mass., friends left flowers and a soccer ball for Martin, who played on the local team. He brought a smile to everyone s face, said Jose Calderon, whose kids were Martin s teammates. Whether we won or lost, he was always one of the brightest stars o
stanley website n the team. Second fatality identified in Boston Marathon bombingsFBI seeks images in Boston Marathon bomb probeComplete Coverage: Boston BombingsFamily friends told us the Richards were nearly always together, like on Monday at the finish line of the race. They often ran together as a family. Martin s mother and younger sister were also injured in the blast. His father Bill released a statement asking for patience and privacy. The Richard family is pictured here in this photo from April 26, 2009. Clockwise from left is older son, Henry, mother
stanley website Denise, father Bill, younger son, Martin, and daughter Jane. Ashmont Adams Neighborhood Association My dear son Martin has died from injuries sustained in the attack on Boston, the statement said. My wife and daughter are both recovering from serious injuries. We t Yvsb Dad, 4-year-old killed in Calif. shooting; 3 hurt
Our species caused 322 animal extinctions over the past 500 years, with two-thirds of those occurring in the last two centuries, according to a paper published in a special issue of the journal Science this week. Top image: Black rhino. Last year, one if its subspecies, the Western Black Rhino, was officially declared extinct, the result of excessive poaching Image: John 038; Karen Hol
stanley cup lingsworth, Wikimedia Commons. Many animals are threatened with human-caused extinction now, with researchers expressing particular concern over amphibian and invertebrate creatures without a backbone losses. Numbers of the latter group hav
stanley mugg e nearly halved as our populat
stanley cup ion doubled in size over the past 35 years. Ecologists, zoologists and other scientists believe that without urgent steps to stem the losses, we are facing global scale tipping points from which we may never look back or recover. Decreasing Footprints Indeed, if current rates of human population growth were to continue unchecked, population size would be, by 2100, about 27 billion persons 鈥?clearly an unthinkable and unsustainable option, co-author Rodolfo Dirzo, professor of environmental sciences at Stanford University, told Discovery News. Dirzo and his colleagues call for decreasing the per capita human footprint, by developing and implementing carbon-neutral technologies, producing food and goods more efficiently, consuming less and wasting less. They also say it is essential we ensure th