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Rodent infestation at Angel Stadium leads to concession stand shutdown after health inspection report

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The Los Angeles Angels have seemingly traded the rally monkey in for alley rats. Now, there is a new problem crawling into Anaheim: a rodent infestation at Angel Stadium.

Health inspection reports that surfaced this week showed Section 432 at Angel Stadium was hit with a shutdown, and inspectors found the concession stands were not exactly running a tight ship.

Turns out some uninvited, four-legged guests were making themselves at home. For once, the stench at the Big A is not just coming from the bullpen.

Orange County Public Health Services did not find just one mouse sniffing around for scraps. Inspectors flagged rodent droppings in five different spots around the concession area, which is still more coverage than the Angels’ lineup usually provides.

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The exclusive report shared by the California Post also noted a ceiling hole larger than a quarter inch, which basically gave the critters a free pass to move between the rafters and the food stations like they had season tickets.

On record, the concession stand was shut down on April 22, which was a homestand against Toronto, ending in a 7-3 win over the Blue Jays.

While the Angels keep struggling to shut down opposing hitters, the health department had no trouble shutting down part of the stadium.

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Angel Stadium is now the fourth-oldest park in Major League Baseball, and it is showing its age in all the wrong ways.

The Angels are paying hundreds of millions for a roster that cannot find home plate, while the rats are finding nacho cheese without spending a dime.

If you are heading to the Big A this week, you might want to think twice about the upper deck snacks.

Until Artie Moreno fixes the holes in the ceiling and the holes in the lineup, the only thing consistently lit in Anaheim might be a Closed for Infestation sign.

Send us your thoughts: [email protected] / Follow along on X: @alejandroaveela 

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Rare 1,700-year-old relic accidentally uncovered during child’s hunt stuns archaeologists

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A child’s recent show-and-tell find turned out to be something unusual: a 1,700-year-old Roman statuette fragment.

Dor Wolynitz, an 8-year-old from Rehovot, Israel, found the artifact during a visit to the Ramon Crater in the Negev Desert of southern Israel, according to a May 11 release from the Israel Antiquities Authority (IAA).

Wolynitz was at a family weekend retreat organized by a paratrooper reserve unit when he stumbled across the fragment, which dates to the fourth century A.D.

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The boy told the IAA he was “looking for special things on the ground that I could show in class.”

“Suddenly, I noticed an interesting stone with stripes lying on the ground, and picked it up,” he said. 

“It seemed like an unusual object to me, so I showed it to Akiva [Goldenhersh], an archaeologist and my dad’s friend, who was with us on our trip.”

The fragment measures six by six centimeters. It depicts “part of a human figure with carefully sculpted folds of fabric,” said Goldenhersh, a supervisor at the IAA’s Antiquities Theft Prevention Unit.

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Goldenhersh told the IAA he “thought it was a fossil” at first glance.

“But then I noticed the sculpted folds of the garment — and I was very excited,” he said.

The statuette was made from a phosphorite-type mineral native to the Negev, indicating it was likely produced locally rather than imported.

“The figure is depicted wearing a type of heavy mantle called a himation, with no visible chiton, or undergarment,” Goldenhersh noted.

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“The manner of sculpting the folds and the choice of such a delicate material indicate a very high level of skill on the part of the artist.”

The statuette may depict the Roman god Jupiter or a Nabatean god called Zeus-Dushara.

The Ramon Crater area sits along the ancient spice route that was once a major artery during the Roman and Nabatean periods, where multiple cultures intersected and exchanged goods.

“This tiny find thus reflects the combination of local traditions with influences from the classical world,” he said.

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Goldenhersh told Fox News Digital that finding Roman-era stone figurines in this style is “relatively rare in general.”

“Discovering one as a surface find, rather than during a controlled excavation, is especially unusual,” he noted.

Because only a fragment remains, the archaeologists suggested it moved from its original location due to erosion or natural shifts over time.

“At the same time, the desert conditions in the Negev can help preserve artifacts and occasionally expose them on the surface,” said Goldenhersh.

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Wolynitz, the 8-year-old, handed the find over to Israel’s National Treasures Department and received a certificate for his “good citizenship,” the IAA said.

“The responsible conduct of Dor and his family is an example of proper civic responsibility and the preservation of our country’s cultural assets,” Goldenhersh said in a statement.

“Dor is a role model for us all.”

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