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Nicole Curtis reveals “setback” in his return to “rehabilitation addiction”

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Home renovation enthusiast Nicole Curtis returned to HGTV nearly three years later.

With the June 24 premiere of Season 9, the 48-year-old historic building preservation enthusiast appears in the first new “Rehabilitation Addiction” episode since 2018 (the spinoff “Rehabilitation Addiction Lake House Rescue” was a recent on-air appearance. The season aired in 2022).

The HGTV star admitted that he wasn’t sailing smoothly behind the scenes.

“I was shaking my neck around my life, and it was one of those moments when I wondered how I could get through this,” she told people in an interview published on June 24th.

She didn’t delve into the nature of the “set fold,” but she made it reassess her priorities in life, saying, “I prayed for it. It was devastating for me. I made a decision there and then, “OK, this has to affect us, or we’re going to choose it.”

She detailed a voluntary 2022 trip, when she had forgotten her wallet, leaving behind a $72 US dollar bill on a layover in Paris. Rather than panic, Curtis saw the travel disaster as a “sign” and quickly realized he hadn’t looked at the Wyoming home site.

“I’m going to knock off all my wish lists tonight,” she thought at the time. Described by HGTV as “a 1890s home exposed to a bad flip,” the house will appear in four upcoming “rehabilitation addiction” episodes that it called the “evolved version” of the show that debuted in 2010.

“I’m not this little poor mom from Minneapolis driving in this pickup truck with my two dogs and my kids,” she said. “But I’m still me, I’m still Nicole Curtis of Detroit. I want you to preserve that building, we’re going to do it.”

Speaking to people about returning to television with Rescue Rehabilitation Addicts in 2022, Curtis admitted that “I’ve been completely burned out” after eight seasons of “Rehabilitation Addicts.” She said, “There was so much time in the decade where I couldn’t enjoy it at all. I was stressed out.”

Nicole Curtis gives his sons a “gift” of privacy

In her recent interview with people, Curtis also mentioned the turbulent family life that made headlines nearly a decade ago. Almost ten years ago, she and former partner Shane Maguire began custody over her now 10-year-old son, Harper.

“Our family has gone through so much over the years, so it’s definitely been that we kept my family out of the public eye and did our best to focus on our home,” she told people. “That’s always where we wanted that focus.”

Curtis reveals that although her older son, Ethan, has appeared earlier, she does not show much of her family in the new episode.

“I think there’s one gift we can give to our kids. I give them privacy. They’re going out with me to a lot of people and I’m protecting them,” she said. “But I will never do it again. My boy is my most precious and precious thing in the whole world.”

A new dog-sized dinosaur species has been discovered

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London
CNN

Scientists have discovered a new species of dinosaurs. It is a dog-sized dinosaur that roamed what is now 150 million years ago, along with familiar dinosaurs like Stegosaurus and Diplodocus.

Enigmacursor Mollyborthwickae, As the researchers named it, a study published in the Royal Society’s Open Science on Wednesday found that the researchers were roughly the same size as the Labrador retriever, with a tail that compensated for about half its length.

Much of that bone was excavated from the Morrison Formation in Colorado between 2021 and 2022, but some of its skull and vertebral sections were missing, and scientists were not sure of its exact length.

“Dinosaurs that eat these very small plants are pretty rare (to find them),” Professor Paul Barrett, a researcher at the Museum of Natural History in London, who co-led the study, told CNN.

The skeleton will be exhibited at the Museum of Natural History in London.

“In reality, it’s not common to find a virtually finished skeleton rather than a few bits or bone fragments, and as a result, it’s pretty unknown.”

The skeleton will be on display at the Natural History Museum from June 26th.

The dinosaur was very “lightly built” and weighed the same as the Collie, Barrett said. It would have been a herbivore and walked on its long hind legs. It “indicating that it was a very speedy runner,” Barrett added, which means that it could make a “fast vacation” from predators.

He and his colleague Susanna’s maidens began researching the specimen after the London art gallery, which was exhibiting dinosaurs, contacted them.

They were ultimately able to work with the gallery to find a donor who could help bring the skeleton to the museum. The species’ name honors donor Molly Borthwick, and the genus is Latin for “mysterious runner.”

The skull was missing from the skeleton, so what appears is a reconstruction.

By carefully examining the bones, the maid and Barrett concluded that the specimen differed from other known species, and had unique characteristics. Its thigh bones are particularly distinctive, with a different kind of muscle attachment from other dinosaurs, Barrett said.

It is most closely related to Yandusaurus Hongheenis, a long 3-meter (9.8-foot) dinosaur found in China. This suggests that the species is widely distributed, Barrett said he hypothesizes that no other fossils have been found yet.

Scientists believe that the specimen has not yet been fully grown, as it has not yet fused, but they cannot be sure because of the way the fossils were prepared before coming to the Natural History Museum. It is also not clear how the dinosaurs died, as there are no obvious signs of illness or injury in the bones.

Barrett said new species of dinosaurs are excavated or frequently identified relatively frequently. However, finding such a small dinosaur is much rarer. Partly because fossil hunters looking for bigger, more impressive dinosaurs have overlooked it.

We find these little dinosaurs that are often left on the ground, “we’re more fully thinking about what their ecosystems look like,” Barrett said.

When can you expect rate reductions?

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good morning! It’s your daily money, Daniel de Vis from Jerome Powell’s version.

Despite growing political pressure, the Federal Reserve Chair stands by the central bank’s waiting approach to cutting interest rates.

Powell reiterated Tuesday that the Fed plans to dispel pressure from both Trump, his own federal colleagues and Republican lawmakers before lowering the fees before assessing the impact of President Donald Trump’s tariffs.

So when can you expect a rate reduction?

Lawmakers want answers to the housing crisis

As the housing crisis deepens across the nation, policymakers are increasingly searching for answers.

On June 24th, D-Michigan MP Rashida Tlaib came up with no concerns about housing costs.

More than half of the black women in the county that Tlaib represents have experienced some kind of eviction, she said. These numbers are “terrifying,” she said.

But what can the Federal Reserve do about the housing crisis? Answer here.

📰 More Stories You Shouldn’t Overlook 📰

🍔Today’s Menu🍔

Soon, the original glass-enclosed donuts will no longer be a dessert option alongside Oreo McFleurley and Hot Fudge Sunday. McDonald’s and Krispy Kreme have announced the end of the partnership.

Earlier this year, the fast food giant began offering three different types of Krispy Cream Treats at around 2,400 McDonald’s locations.

Why stop now?

About daily money

Every day, Daily Money will provide you with the best consumer and financial news from USA Today, breaking complex events, providing you with the TLDR version, and explaining how everything from the Fed rate to bankruptcy will affect you.

Daniel de Visé covers USA Today personal finance.

NATO commits to higher spending than President Trump wants

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Trump has got what he wanted at the short NATO summit, but his allies will be freed that he has committed to the fundamental principles of collective defense.

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The Hague, June 25 (Reuters) – NATO leaders on June 25 supported the massive increase in defense spending demanded by President Donald Trump, and revised their commitment to protecting each other from attacks.

Trump got what he wanted in a short summit tailored for him, but his NATO allies are relieved that after a clearer language on June 24th, he has committed to the fundamental principles of collective defense.

In a five-point statement, NATO approved a higher defensive spending target of 5% of GDP by 2035. This is a response to the fear of not just Trump, but also Europeans that Russia is increasing the threat to safety following the 2022 invasion of Ukraine.

A brief communion of the 32 allies stated, “Reaffirms the iron’s round commitment to collective defense, engraved in Article 5 of the Washington Convention.

Asked to clarify his own stance in Article 5, Trump said, “I’m putting it up, so that’s why I’m here. If I hadn’t put it up, I wouldn’t be here.”

Macron will launch a trade war at NATO summit

Trump has long demanded for other countries with uncertain terms that he would strengthen defense spending to reduce NATO’s dependence on the US.

Despite the emergence of a general agreement, French President Emmanuel Macron raised the issue of sudden import duties threatened by Trump and the damages inflicted on transatlantic trade as a barrier to increased defence spending.

“You can’t come to us as an ally and ask us to spend more. Say we’ll spend more on NATO – and that’s extraordinary,” he told reporters.

NATO Executive Director Mark Latte, who held the summit in his hometown of The Hague, said NATO would appear as an alliance “stronger, fairer, more deadly.”

He previously admitted that it’s not easy for European countries and Canada to find extra money, but he said it’s essential to do so.

“I have an absolute belief with my colleagues that there is no alternative, given the international security situation, given this threat from the Russians,” the former Dutch prime minister told reporters in the Hague, his hometown city.

The new spending target to be achieved over the next decade is a jump worth hundreds of billions of dollars a year from its current target of 2% of GDP, but measurements are different.

Countries spend 3.5% of their GDP on core defenses such as military forces and weapons, with 1.5% dealing with heavy military vehicles on broader defense-related measures such as cybersecurity, pipeline protection, and road and bridge adaptation.

All NATO members support the statement that enforced the target, but declared that Spain does not have to achieve its goals and can fulfill its commitment by spending much less.

Latte accepted a diplomatic fudge with Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez as part of his efforts to give Trump a diplomatic victory and make the summit go smoothly, but fought for it.

Spain said on June 25 that it does not believe its stance would have an impact.

Trump meets Zelensky after the summit

Latte shortened the summit and its final statement, focusing on spending pledges to avoid friction with Trump.

Ukrainian President Voldymi Zelenki had to attend the pre-dinner dinner on June 24th, not the main meeting on June 25th.

On June 24, the Kremlin accused NATO of being on the ramp-stretched militarization path, portraying Russia as a “hell demon” to justify a massive increase in defence spending.

“Soulmated So Hard” Tiktok trends explained

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Our pets are our most trusted and precious companions. When they die, our lives are never exactly the same. We cry. We lament. We are sad.

Perhaps that’s why the “soulmate hard” trend is showing up in Tiktok. There, users pay tribute to their furry friends (and make people cry in the process). One such video followed by choked comments: “The worst part of keeping a dog. They’re not long enough here.” “Amazing, I’m going to cry and sleep.” “As long as (you) do your best as a pet parent, don’t forget that your pet had the best life possible!”

According to licensed marriage and family therapist Laurie Johnson, grief experts often talk about grief of being disenfranchised or about losses that are not openly recognized, socially grieving and publicly supported. They say it is effective, and this trend highlights its possible impact and catharsis.

“This reflects more modern times people are learning a tendency to a deep anticipated sadness or sense of sadness that has been disenfranchised,” says Gina Moffa, a sadness and trauma therapist at LCSW in New York City, “movement does not mean letting go.” “It normalizes pet loss and the importance of our beloved pets in our lives in society can sometimes fail to recognize or respect.”

“Unconditional love we respect”

No, pets are not human. But for some, they certainly seem soulmates. Who else do you take a whimsical walk or hug it under a cozy, comfortable blanket at night? Certainly family and friends, but pets offer that special kind of unconditional love.

“One thing we often overlook is how animals do it right. They provide unconditional love that we respect as humans, but often struggle to live because of our complexities and limitations.”

What is “powered mourning”?

There’s no problem watching or posting these videos. It’s okay to call your pet your “soulmate.” Not everyone understands it, but it’s not about them. It’s about you and your animals.

“Losing a pet is a serious loss, and so being ‘soulmates work hard’ can normalize the importance of pets in our lives.

That normalization is partially done thanks to scrolling on Tiktok and other social media apps. “This trend may resonate very deeply, as it provides people with a way to publicly respect the love and loss of being that means that,” Johnson says.

Tiktok offers what is called “empowered mourning.” Reclaim the story of an invalid or embarrassing journey.

“Yes, ‘Yes, this is deeply important’, praises the embarrassment and gives others permission to do the same,” adds Moffa.

And education about grief, all kinds – better.

If you would like to share your thoughts on USA Today and sadness for use in future stories, check it out.

Police fire tear gas and water cannons when they bring thousands of Kenyan protesters onto the streets

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Nairobi, Kenya
CNN

Police in Kenya fired tears and water cannons to spray protesters as thousands took them to the streets to mark the one-year anniversary of the anti-government demonstration, which killed dozens of people.

Government regulators, Kenya’s communications agency, have ordered all television and radio stations in the country to stop broadcasting live coverage of the youth-led march protests that began Wednesday.

The agency falsely claimed that live coverage of the demonstrations had violated Kenya’s laws, while threatening regulatory measures to violate the directive. Many of the stations did not immediately stop broadcasts, including CNN Affiliate Citizen TV.

Thousands of people protested in the capital and other areas on June 25th, taking them to the streets of Kenya.

Thousands of people have demonstrated in the capital, Nairobi, the coastal cities of Mombasa, and other towns commemorating the protest anniversary.

In Nairobi, the Kenya Parliament building and the road leading to the President’s office were barricaded before the demonstrations.

Last June, many were killed by security forces outside Congress, causing nationwide outrage.

Protesters respond Wednesday in front of a burning barricade in downtown Nairobi.
People protested to celebrate the one anniversary of the fatal anti-tax demonstration.
Security guards gather near a razor wire fence built to block access to council buildings.

The 2024 demonstration forced the withdrawal of the controversial fiscal bill that raised taxes.

But many young people in Kenya are still furious in some suspicious cases Police atrocities, including the death of a teacher in police custody and the shooting of an unarmed street vendor.

CNN witnessed police shot dead a live round in Nairobi on Wednesday to disrupt peaceful protesters. Several demonstrators showed used cartridges.

Protesters were also repelled with tear gas and water cannon trucks in the capital. It reminded me of last year’s dramatic scene.

Police officers during a demonstration in the capital of Kenya on June 25th.

Citizen TV posted a video to X showing the injured individual being moved to Nairobi Hospital.

In Mombasa, some protesters were arrested and taken to police trucks, another video showed.

Citizens TV reportedly killed in a demonstration in eastern Kenya’s Machakos County on Wednesday morning.

CNN could not immediately confirm the victim, but requested comment from Police Services.

NBA Draft: Unique Visas hurdles prospects Kaman Mallach faces when traveling for a road trip

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CNN

When the US State Department announced on April 5 that it would cancel all existing visas for South Sudanian citizens, it cast uncertainty on the lives of all national lives in the United States.

One of those citizens is basketball player Kaman Mallach. He had just declared for the 2025 NBA Draft after leaving Duke at the time of the announcement.

Malach – a 7-foot, 2-inch towering rim conservation center – is widely expected to be a lottery in Wednesday’s draft, with his dynamism and high ceilings making him an exciting prospect for several NBA teams.

There may be obstacles and red tape, but Mallach’s path to the NBA is certainly sailable.

Kamanmaruach of the Duke Blue Devils Center will develop the trophy and celebrate with his teammates after winning the 2025 ACC Conference Championship.

After signing with Duke, Mallach has obtained the F1 visa, a standard student visa that has been suspended since May, but is back on the tourist visa as he is waiting for the NBA draft.

If drafted by one of the league’s 29 American teams, Maluach will move to the P1 visa, a professional athlete visa. A significant portion of the NBA’s international players remain on the P1 visa over their long-term careers.

However, CNN Sports understands that while Mallach will not be given a P1 visa if drafted by the Toronto Raptors, a B1 business visa will be required to enter and leave the United States. In Canada, he will probably be on an O1 visa for foreigners with “extraordinary abilities.”

For example, if Mallach is drafted for a team at the Eastern Conference and has two road trips to Toronto in the season, he will need a waiver and a new visa every time he rejoins the US.

However, if drafted by Raptors, CNN Sports understands that Maluach requires a new B1 visa and exemption for each road trip to the US.

Mallach will be the only player in the league to face these types of important logistical hurdles, such as having to come directly to obtain a new visa, but this type of complexity is not necessarily unique.

Former NBA center Enes Kanter had no valid travel documents for three years while his Turkish passport was cancelled and receiving his US citizenship, but he was able to travel to Canada for ongoing conversations between the league and the US and Canadian authorities.

The Boston Celtics Center Enescanter (13) will be watching in Washington in the first half of an NBA basketball game against the Washington Wizard on Saturday, October 30, 2021. (AP photo/Nick Wash)

A US State Department spokesman did not comment on the specific incident, but in a statement to CNN:

“South Sudan passport holders who have been notified of their visa expiration are not required to leave the US before they can be granted until the date. Future trips to the US will require a new visa application.

“We will continue to make decisions regarding visa services around the world in a way that prioritizes maintaining the highest standards of US national security and public safety.”

The Raptors said they had no comment on the team’s draft plan. CNN contacted the South Sudan Embassy for comment.

Born in the town of Rambeck, Mallach and his family fled to neighboring Uganda when the Centre was a boy due to the conflict in South Sudan.

When he was 13, Mallach recalls that motorcyclists would stop him on the street and give him some visionary advice.

“He was like, ‘Yeah, you have to start playing basketball. In three or four years, you’re going to be that taller,” Maluach told Olympics.com.

Incredibly, Mallach says he only picked up basketball for the first time when he was 13 or 14, and soon after a quip from a motorcyclist he took part in a basketball camp hosted by former NBA player Luol Deng in South Sudan.

“I had just gone camping and saw a happy tall person. It was like, ‘This is where I belong,'” the smiling Mallach told reporters in May. “I came back the next day and picked up a basketball.”

By the time the camp came the following year, Mallach said he was already the tallest there.

Troyustice, the senior vice president of the NBA and head of international basketball operations, oversees the league’s global grassroots program and recalls the first time he saw Maulach in a WhatsApp video sent by Scouts at the NBA Academy Africa.

“It’s like a young 14-year-old tall boy who doesn’t play basketball and I believe we have high potential,” Justice tells CNN about Scout’s rating. “And he comes from an incredible family, so we really believe he’s a perfect fit for the academy program.”

Mallach will go to the basketball in South Sudan past Puerto Rico's Davon Reed in the men's reserve round group C basketball match during the Paris 2024 Olympics.

It was soon revealed that the Academy had special talent in its hands.

Brendan McKillop, the Vice President of NBA, who oversees the academy, was amazed at how easily it appears on the court for anyone who has never picked up basketball before.

“His size and length are unmistakable the first time I met him,” McKillop tells CNN. “The thing that popped out most at me was his fluidity.

“Many young kids who have never played sports really don’t know how to move, but he had this natural ability. He touched, had great hands and knew how to move well on the basketball court.

Maulach was selected as MVP and defensive player for the Basketball-free Border Africa Program, run by the NBA and has been part of the Elevation Program, which has one NBA Academy Africa outlook for each of the 12 Basketball Africa League (BAL) teams in recent seasons.

In 2023, Mallach started for the Senegalese team as Douanes in the BAL final, co-founded by the international governing bodies of basketball in 2019 by the NBA and FIBA.

His rise represented South Sudan, the youngest country in the world at the 2024 Parish Games. Mallach was the youngest player in the tournament.

Mallach dunks against the Stanford Cardinal in the second half of the match at Cameron Indoor Stadium on February 15th.

The 18-year-old has undoubtedly the physical attributes to succeed at the highest level, but Justice stated that it was the Malach mentality that made him stand out.

“It’s his ability to listen and learn,” Justice explains. “He consumes everything he is given by the staff who coach the Academy’s strength and conditioning coaches. He is a ready learner, constantly learning, constantly growing, constantly changing, constantly evolving and working.

“He has professional habits. He learned them at the academy, but he also came to us with a special character that allows him to get hungry.”

These feelings are reflected by McKillop, who calls Mallach “an incredibly unique and special child.”

“He also brings an incredible work ethic, incredible attitude, leadership, desire to be great and humility to the table,” adds McKillop.

But more than anything, McKillop was taken to the way a young man interacted with those who helped him on his path.

“He never forgot how lucky he was,” says McKillop. “He’s always the first person to be grateful for. If you see our staff watching three times a year and see him at events or whatever, he knows all of our names and greets us by name.

“I’m excited that he has this opportunity before him.”

Our stock futures remain little different and are waiting for more testimony from the Fed chair

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US stock futures have largely remained unchanged, with the wide S&P 500 within impressive distances from record highs.

At about 7:08am ET, futures linked to the S&P 500 increased 0.02% (1.25 points) to 6,147.50, while Blue Chip Dow Futures soaked 0.08% (35 points) to 43,389.00. And the high-tech Nasdaq futures scored 0.15% or 33.75 points to 22,446.50. The benchmark’s 10-year financial yield remained flat at 4.293%.

The oil slides have ended and the price rose 0.99% at $65.01 per barrel. Oil prices fell for the second day in a row as Middle Eastern oil supply appeared to remain unchanged.

Stocks progressed daily after Israel and Iran agreed to a ceasefire. Fragile – Both sides accused each other of breaking the agreement within hours of its effectiveness, but investors seem to believe it will be held, or at least help to keep the conflict down and keep the global oil supply intact. As a result, oil prices have slipped for the second day in a row.

Once tensions in the Middle East are eased, investors will turn their attention to the second day of Federal Reserve Chairman Germaum Powell’s Congressional testimony. In his first appearance, he stayed in the script and repeated his “waiting” approach to cut back. He said the economy is now stable enough to see how tariffs affect inflation before deciding on any fee cuts.

Corporate News

  • FedEx results exceeded analyst estimates over the past three months of the fiscal year, but the current quarterly outlook was weaker than expected. Stocks fell 5.82% in pre-market trading.
  • Worthington Enterprises’ fourth quarter results are better than forecasts. Stocks rose 11.39% over the opening bell.
  • Tesla sold just 13,863 vehicles in Europe last month, down 28% from the previous year. It is the worst major manufacturer in Europe, according to sales data from the ACEA Regional Automobile Manufacturers Association. Elevated vehicle manufacturers’ stocks have risen slightly in pre-market activity.
  • Aerovironment results beat Foreacsts in the last three months of the fiscal year, but annual revenue guidance was below expectations. Stocks rose a little before the opening.
  • QuantumScape has announced a breakthrough in the process for creating solid batteries. The stock spiked Pribel at 34.87%.
  • BlackBerry raised its annual sales guidance after reporting quarterly results that exceeded expectations. Stocks rose 9.24% in pre-market trading.

Cryptocurrency

The New York Stock Exchange has applied for a rule change to allow it to list true social bitcoin and Ethereum ETFs.

Bitcoin last rose 0.85% at $106,942.90.

Medora Lee is a money, market and personal finance reporter for USA Today. mjlee@usatoday.com and Subscribe to our free daily money newsletter Personal finance tips and business news every Monday to Friday.

Trump’s latest news on Iran’s intelligence assessment

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Trump’s comments on the intelligence assessment came before a meeting with world leaders at the NATO summit.

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President Donald Trump shrugged the Pentagon rating on Wednesday, suggesting that the US bombing raid may not seriously damage Iran’s nuclear capabilities.

Iran and Israel were claiming victory in a short but deadly conflict as they waited to decide whether a ceasefire would be held.

Israeli Prime Minister Minzer Benjamin Netanyahu said his country achieved its target for an attack on Iran by destroying the country’s nuclear program. Trump said he “decapitated” Iran’s nuclear site when he dropped 14 “bunkerbuster” bombs at three facilities.

However, the Pentagon Intelligence Evaluation states that the 30,000-pound weapons won’t reach deep enough to destroy underground facilities, and is likely to delay Iran’s nuclear program in a few months. Trump said Wednesday that intelligence was inconclusive.

“Intellect says we don’t know. That could have been very serious. That’s what the intelligence news suggests,” Trump told reporters earlier when he met with NATO executive director Mark Latte at the NATO summit in the Netherlands. “It was very serious. There was an expungement.”

In Iran, the highest national security council declared that the Islamic Republic’s military response to the attack forced Israel and its Western supporters to unilaterally halt its attack operations. Iranian nuclear official Mohammad Eslami told MEHR News Agency that preparations made ahead of the attack would prevent the suspension of Iran’s nuclear industry.

The radical Israeli attack, which began on June 13, targeted military leaders, nuclear scientists, uranium enrichment facilities and Iran’s ballistic missile programmes.

The war was expensive. Iranian health minister Mohammad Reza Zafarkandi said more than 600 Iranians had been killed by Israeli missiles. According to the Israeli era, Iran’s missile attacks killed about 30 people, killing about 30 people in Israel, and thousands seriously injured in Israel.

Residents and tourists in some major American cities say they are worried about the possibility of violence erupting at home. At Penn Station in New York, Boston kindergarten teacher Katherine Wagoner told USA Today, a kindergarten teacher waiting for a train home after visiting a friend, that she felt she had fewer travel since the attack in Iran.

“Being in New York feels more like a threat – more like a target,” she says, “I definitely have a lot of privileges, and I don’t necessarily feel like a target, so I can recognize it.

Wagoner’s sentiment was reflected in a recent Reuters/Ipsos poll that surveyed 1,139 US adults nationwide and found that around 79% of respondents responded that “Iran could target our civilians in response to US airstrikes.” Click here for details.

– – Christopher Kang and Michael Collins

The US intelligence community is consistent. I don’t think Iran is building nuclear weapons. US National Intelligence Director Tulsi Gabbard said a lot when he testified to Congress about Iran’s nuclear program in March.

The US spy agency said “we will continue to assess Iran as not building nuclear weapons, and Supreme Leader Khamenei has not approved the nuclear weapons programme that was stopped in 2003.”

Trump and Netanyahu dismissed the review. Trump doubted the US intelligence reporting agency more than the person responsible for the murder of Washington Post columnist Jamal Khashoggi (Saudi Arabia). Meanwhile, Netanyahu has spoken about Iran’s existential nuclear threat to Israel.

Still, I agree with the issue of uranium in the US Intelligence Agency, Trump, Netanyahu and the United Nations nuclear surveillance – the International Atomic Energy Agency – Iran.

All believes that Iran has developed a large stockpile and maintained a nuclear reaction that can be used if it decides to use it in bombs at a well-enriched level. But as General Michael E. Kurira said on June 10, how quickly Iran can “sprint towards nuclear weapons” is also a matter of conflict, with estimates ranging from one week to one year.

—Kim Hjelmgaard

Trump ordered a strike at Iran’s nuclear facility – Operation Midnight Hammer – effectively participated in the war that began on June 13, when Israel began bombing Iran’s nuclear and military infrastructure. Israel said it will help the US coordinate and plan the strike.

Trump said all three sites were “completely gone.” However, independent assessments have not yet been performed. The International Atomic Energy Agency – the United Nations nuclear watchdog – has issued a statement that so far has not detected an increase in “off-site radiation levels,” one of the threatening outcomes of a strike.

Contribution: Reuters

The “Journey to Freedom” tour aims to teach girls more black history

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The mentoring program for black girls and young women takes participants on a 14-day tour and learns about the Underground Railroad, the history of black people.

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WASHINGTON – Samaria Helton learned about Thomas Jefferson at school, but didn’t know that the former president had hundreds of enslaved people until he recently visited the Monticello Farm in Virginia.

The visit was important in her quest to learn more about black history, she said.

“This is my history,” said Helton, a 16-year-old high school junior from Sanford, North Carolina. “You need to learn about your history.”

Monticello was one of several stops on a 14-day trip between Helton and eight other middle and high school students, a mentoring program for black girls and young women. They learn firsthand about black history when they visit historic Black Churches, Old Plantations, the National Museum of African Americans, and other places that tell their stories.

This trip, “The Journey To Freedom,” brings participants through the state where abolitionist Harriet Tubman led people who were free to enslavement on the Underground Railroad.

Organizers said the trip is especially important now, with the stripping of historic black figures, including Tubman from the website, the ban on books, the demolition of educational programs, and the attacks on diversity, equity and comprehensive initiatives.

“Knowledge is a core value for us,” said Natasha Sistrank Robinson, co-founder of Leadership Link. “We are passing on this history across generations.”

“Expression is important”

The early parts of the trip include a stop with a black history link, but on June 25th at the Harriet Tubman Underground Railroad Visitors Center in Maryland, where the girl begins to follow her path.

The program aims to introduce girls to black female leaders, both historical and current days. “So they can see what they’re going to be,” said Robinson, a graduate of the Naval Academy.

The girls were already studying the truth about the abolitionist sojourners, so it would make sense to focus next on Tubman, Sistrank Robinson said.

“To let them know not only the mythical figures of Harriet Tubman, but the full history of her life,” she said. “It didn’t stop her from releasing herself, freeing her family, and fighting for release for others.”

Helton, High school juniors appreciated their focus on Tubman.

“There’s a lot to learn from her, to follow her path and fight for our people like she did,” she said.

The trip will begin in June

The trip began in June in North Carolina, where the girls celebrated with a soul food dinner and a documentary, “June: Documentary of Faith and Freedom.”

“It was a fun way to start our trip,” said 16-year-old Capria Daniels, a high school junior in Clinton, Maryland.

Daniels said he can’t miss the opportunity to take part in the two-week trip.

The girls, from sixth grade to seniors in high school, came from Georgia, Maryland, North Carolina, Texas and Virginia. The trip is funded by grants and donations.

Stops include Virginia University, the Museum of African American History and Culture, Howard University, and the historic Black School in Washington, DC, as well as a visit to the American Revolution Museum in Philadelphia and the Tubman home in upstate New York. The journey ended in Toronto, where many enslaved black people fled.

There are also some light outings, such as the Broadway musical “Hamilton.” At some stops, guest speakers discuss the importance of leadership.

Daniels said the stop “will give you a better understanding of where I came from and teach the next generation.”

“Most of it is coated with sugar.”

Beyond site visits and reading assignments, girls have a passport book to collect stamps at each stop and write down reflections.

They are also equipped with songbooks to learn classic protest songs such as “The Eye of the Prize” and modern gospel songs like “Goodness of God.”

Still at the heart of our trip, we visit sites that have connections to black history.

“It makes things we read about the real thing for them in very different ways,” Robinson said.

Helton and Daniels said that the lessons of history at school often do not tell the entire story, including the brutality of slavery.

“We learned the basics, and most of it is coated with sugar,” Helton said.

When he visited the Museum of History and Culture of African Americans attacked by the Trump administration earlier this week, Helton said he learned more about the horrifying situation of millions of Africans stuffed into slave ships.

“It was sad to just know that they had to go through it,” she said.

Destiny Davis, 20, a summer intern in the program, said even college lacks teaching the truth about black history.

“They rule out a lot of graphic information,” said Davis, a junior at the University of North Carolina’s Greensboro. “They teach you the history you want them to know.”

For Daniels, each stop meant learning something new.

“It definitely taught me more about my history,” she said.

Cold-blooded murderer or victim of PTSD? Vietnamese veterinarians face running

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Richard Jordan claims he has never heard of the trauma that the ju umpire suffered after three battle tours in the Vietnam War. His victim’s son laments the 50 years the incident took place.

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Did Richard Jordan commit murder due to post-traumatic stress disorder from three combat tours in the Vietnam War? Or is he just a cold-blooded murderer?

That question lies at the heart of Jordan’s debate over his impending execution in Mississippi on Wednesday, June 25th – a shy man who has been 50 years since he lured and killed 36-year-old Edwina Mater, the mother of two sons. Jordan shot Marter in the back of his head before the banker’s husband paid a $25,000 ransom for his return on January 12, 1976.

“Like other veterans, Vietnam changed Richard forever, leaving him as a “traumatized man.” He was reveredly discharged from the hospital with various medals for 33 months, often in dangerous positions as a helicopter gunner, according to his petition filed June 16th.

Currently at age 79, Mississippi’s death row inmate, he will mentor young prisoners, quell violent breakouts and work with banks to help prevent employees from becoming targets like Marter, his petition says.

However, at a Jordanian trial in 1976, prosecutors told the ju judge to consider how Jordan demanded a ransom for the safe return of Mater, even after the deaths were shot and killed.

“Did you notice how cool it is and how cold it is?” then Jackson County District Attorney Albert Nekeys said that according to an archived report from the Daily Herald in Biloxi. “He was a judge, he was a jury, and he was also her executioner.”

As Jordan’s execution with a deadly injection approaches, USA Today looks back on the case, a dramatic murder trial, and whether Mississippi Governor Tate Reeves responded to the prisoner’s request for a 15-minute meeting to hear him.

Discover Witnesses: Visit our exclusive collection of true crime stories, podcasts, videos and more.

Edwina Mater’s Invitation and Murder

On January 12, 1976, Edwina Mater was at her Mississippi home, where her two sons, one of three-year-old Kevin, and her 10-year-old son Eric were at school, court records said.

Richard Jordan appears and invites Marter when Kevin falls asleep. Jordan knew her husband, Charles Mater, was an executive at the Gulf National Bank, and decided to target ransom money to couples, court records say.

Jordan headed out about 35 miles from Edwina Mater to an abandoned area of ​​the Desoto National Forest. There, the prosecutor said she executed her by kneeling and firing a bullet into the back of her head. Jordan claimed that it should be a warning shot when a fatal bullet escapes.

After killing Edwina, Jordan called Charles Mater and told him that his wife was fine and thriving and that it would cost him $25,000 to get her back, court records say.

A report in the Daily Herald shows that half a dozen law enforcement agencies, including the FBI, quickly unfold when they report the lure, and local journalists rarely agree to nearly 24 hours a day news silence, allowing their desperate husband to drop their money.

After Jordan had directed Mater to many wasted stops in various places, money was eventually left under the jacket on the side of the road, where Jordan recovered it when he saw the authorities not being detected. A high-speed chase followed, including officers hitting cars with multiple bullets in Jordanian cars. Jordan made a brief escape but was later arrested after being found behind a taxi due to police disability.

Richard Jordan was sentenced to death four times

Jordan’s dramatic first trial ruled local newspaper headlines as prosecutors painted vivid pictures for the ju apprentices who convicted him.

District Attorney Nekeise said Jordan’s executions were more humane than Edwina Mater’s murder, noting that his family “doesn’t have to run down the road looking for his body,” according to the Herald.

“The body will be handed over to them,” continued Nekeise. “The birds of the air and the beasts of the fields will not be left to east feast.”

Earl Denham, a Jordanian court-appointed defense counsel, gave an unusual closing statement, telling the ju judge that it was a “nightmare” for him and that his client was a sociopath, Herald reported.

“He’s calm, he’s quiet and he’s never shown me any emotional nerds about anything,” Denham said. “If he’s anything, he’s sick.”

Necaise later dismissed it: “I say he’s not a sick man, I say he’s a greedy man.”

Jordan was sentenced to death after his trial in 1976, which later became invalid for changes to the death penalty law, and was again tried in 1977, convicted and sentenced to death. The Court of Appeal later invalidated the sentence for an unconstitutional penalty directive, but Jordan was again sentenced to death in 1983’s Res Tinsing. That too was later invalidated by the US Supreme Court, and Jordan reached an agreement with prosecutors for a life sentence.

Then, in 1994, the Mississippi Supreme Court overridden the agreement and stated it shouldn’t be an option. Jordan was sentenced for the fourth time in 1998.

Richard Jordan’s PTSD never presented it to the ju apprentice

During the Jordanian legal proceedings, the ju judge had never heard of PTSD from Vietnamese service in the First Calvary Division from 1966 to 1969, according to his petition for tolerance.

As door gunners, he protected the ground forces by attaching an M60 machine gun to the helicopter’s cargo doors to provide “defensive and repressive fire.” According to one of Jordan’s filings in the U.S. Supreme Court. He was “trained to kill in sight,” the submission said.

Jordan was fired in a small shed once suspected of shooting down a US helicopter, and later found out that a woman and a child were dead.

His base, Phu Bai, near Phu in South Vietnam, was attacked in “one of the bloodiest battles during the 1968 Tet attack,” during which he was “under constant threat of being killed,” the petition states.

Nearly three years after the war, Jordan returned to Mississippi’s mentally and emotional home, struggling with “an experienced period of stranger suspicion, emotional paralysis.”

According to his generosity petition, seeking a meeting with Jordan and Governor Tate Reeves, “After the ju judge heard this important information, Richard may not have been sentenced to death.”

Neither the Tate office nor the Mississippi Attorney General’s office responded to requests for comment on the story, including whether the governor would attend the meeting.

In a recent court filing, the state stands behind Jordan’s death penalty and executions, calling his claim “baseless.”

He “she executed her young mother after luring her to force her to pay from her husband. The jury convicted him of murder and was sentenced to death nearly 30 years ago,” the state told the Supreme Court.

Jordanian lawyers have filed many other legal debates fighting executions, including challenges against drugs used in fatal injection executions.

The victim’s son laments the length of the trial

Edwina Mater’s now 59-year-old son, Eric Mater, said he never bought Jordan’s claim that his family accidentally shot Edwina, but they certainly didn’t buy any discussion about PTSD.

“I’m trying to play as much games as I can, so I won’t be surprised that they won’t die,” he said. “He plays military cards and see if it’s trying to help him.”

He said he had never heard of Jordan’s Vietnam service until recently and pointed out how well-planned crime is. “I’m not really buying it to say you have mental issues.”

He doesn’t have much memory of his mother anymore. His brothers are nothing, but they have heard of some great families. His aunt Norma told the boys that when she and Edwina were young they would wear the most lovely clothes, put on makeup and run the crashed wedding reception. “She loved to have fun,” he said.

Edwina just missed out on the life of his three grandchildren and great grandchildren, he said.

Regarding the execution, he said his family was frustrated by the decades of delay. They’re ready to finish it. “It was too much, too long.”

Run details

Jordan is scheduled to be executed by lethal injection at Parkman’s Mississippi State Prison at 6pm on Wednesday, June 25th.

If Jordan’s executions advance, he will become the 25th prisoner to be executed in the United States this year, matching the amount of executions carried out during the last year.

The United States has previously executed combat veterans, but most recently, on May 1, Florida executed Jeffrey Hutchinson, who served in the Gulf War. Another Vietnamese veteran, Herbert Trichardson, was executed in Alabama in 1989 and portrayed in the 2019 film Just Mercy.

Amanda Lee Myers is a senior crime reporter at USA Today. Follow her on x at @amandaleusat.

Malala changes the fight for women and equality in sports

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CNN

Malala Yousafzai is known to millions of people around the world as an activist and human rights activist. This is the voice of strength and inspiration that he survived an attempted Taliban assassination at the age of 15.

But take the major women’s sporting events of the past few years. You can bet on Yousafzai in the stands, including cricket, soccer, basketball, netball, the Olympics and the Commonwealth Games. She even spent a frozen Valentine’s Day night with her husband Assel Malik.

Now called the Single Malala, Yousafzai has transformed her fandom into a platform for investing in women’s sports around the world, both at the professional and amateur level.

Recess is her latest initiative aimed at strengthening the rights of women and girls through sports. This is a concept that can be said to have been in the pipeline since Yousafzai’s childhood in Pakistan.

“I remember the school break times when boys went out to the local cricket playground and girls had to stay behind,” she said in an exclusive interview with CNN Sports. “From that point on, I knew sports were something girls couldn’t easily access.”

And in today’s global climate, rising conflict and political tensions, Yousafzai believes sports will play a more important role than ever before.

“I think about young people and how their lives are at risk, how their children are killed, how they are starved, and how girls’ rights are being taken away in Afghanistan,” she said. “Just seeing tensions around the world, we can only hope for peace and pray, and encourage everyone to put their weapons and think about hope for humanity.

“We can have dialogue. We are coming together and in history sports have proven to be a powerful way of bringing together communities in our present age. …We can be competitive, but at the same time, when the game is over, we can embrace each other, shake hands, and we can all shake humanity.”

Yousafzai will be seen in a pack with members of the Afghan women's soccer team in August 2023.

A longtime dedicated campaigner for women’s education, Yousafzai became an internationally recognized figure after being shot in the head by the Taliban while riding a bus from school.

To save her life, she was airlifted to a hospital in Birmingham, England, where she had months of surgery and rehabilitation, and recovered and turned the UK into a new home with her family.

Being attached to this experience, Yousafzai founded the Malala Fund in 2013 to defend the right to education for girls, and the following year at the age of 17, he became the youngest person to win the Nobel Peace Prize.

The exit, which began Tuesday to appear at Billy Jean King Power at the Women’s Sports Summit in London, is Yousafzai’s latest initiative dedicated to women and girls’ rights. This time she is doing it with her husband. Her husband has set up a cricket franchise in Pakistan and has worked with the country’s cricket committee.

“Because of the lack of investment and lack of opportunities, we were looking for opportunities that could bring us a platform that would benefit our expertise, women’s sports in general,” says Yousafzai.

Among those who contribute to the advisor initiative are Billy Jean King and his wife Ilana Cross. “People who believe in women’s sports as a business opportunity and believe that women’s sports will help us promote gender equity,” Yousafzai added.

She and Malik have identified the NWSL and WNBA as two leagues that are trying to invest in for the “huge potential” of growth, Yousafzai said.

Yousafzai will be taking part in the New York Liberty Playoff Game in September 2023.

This approach focuses on women’s professional sports in recognized emerging markets, but also on increasing the number of girls involved in sports around the world.

By the age of 14, girls had dropped out of sports activities twice as much as boys, according to the Women’s Sports Foundation. This includes social stigma, lack of role models, etc. due to limited opportunities.

“To grow women’s sports everywhere, they need a different approach to different locations,” Malik told CNN Sports. “And obviously, the off-day approach is to treat them like a proper business and prove that it is a great business case.

Away from the boardroom, Yousafzai, like many people who grew up in Pakistan, is an avid cricket fan. She is also an avid golfer, admitting to thinking about sports “almost every week” and kicks out exactly and detailing her best shot to Malik after the round.

From her perspective as a fan, the 27-year-old has seen the impact of athletes like Kate Rinklerk, the Indiana Fever star who has grown an audience in the WNBA. She believes it’s like Clark. She believes she can act as a role model and encourage more girls to engage in the sport purely behind their performances.

“They really have a big impact without actually saying a lot,” Yousafzai said. “I don’t think you need to ask them about every topic and every issue, the fact that they are on the ground and they are in court has already changed perspective.

“It gives girls strength. It sends a powerful message to all of us, women, that the sky is the limit and women’s sport will flourish. We can imagine a world where there are more equal opportunities for women and girls and girls can be empowered.”

How far can you drive on a hybrid vehicle? This Toyota gives you 663 miles

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Get the furthest hybrid vehicle with a full tank of gas?

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  • Some hybrids have a driving range of over 600 miles.
  • High-driving vehicles are ideal for commuting and road trips.
  • One Toyota Hybrid has the best driving range of all hybrid vehicles.

Hybrid vehicles can travel long distances using as little fuel as possible. Thanks to advances in hybrid technology, American car buyers have access to some of the most efficient cars ever made. Some of these hybrids can travel over 600 miles in one gas tank.

While some carmakers have previously participated in hybrid games, most major carmakers are currently producing hybrid-only nameplates or hybrid versions of the most popular nameplate. Some brands also produce popular vehicles in mild hybrid versions. One hybrid car has the highest range in all areas and is attracting plenty of attention in 2025.

The 2025 Toyota Camry has the best driving range

Toyota introduced the Prius, the first mass-produced hybrid vehicle in 1997. Decades later, hybrid cars, trucks and SUVs are common in a portfolio of successful automakers. In fact, Toyota has completely xed some gas name plates in its portfolio and replaced them with hybrid-only models.

Toyota’s Camry Nameplate is now a medium-sized hybrid vehicle only. The Camry is the company’s bestselling nameplate for its affordable price, spacious cabin and excellent fuel economy. For 2025, it has been completely redesigned with updated styling, better technology and best-in-class driving range.

The 2025 Toyota Camry has achieved a whopping 53 miles per gallon in the city and 50 miles per gallon on the highway. There is a 13.0 gallon tank. The Camry can travel up to 663 miles with a full tank of gas. By comparison, the popular medium sized vehicle (not a hybrid) Honda Accord has a 488-mile range with a full tank of gas.

Should I get a 2025 Toyota Camry?

Toyota’s medium-sized hybrid sedan starts at $28,700 and is reasonably priced in this segment. Generates 225 horsepower. The all-wheel drive model produces 232 horsepower, but is slightly less efficient.

The 2025 Toyota Camry comes in four different trims, with the final configuration of LE, SE, XLE and XSE. Toyota’s Camry Le Base models have a lot of standard features, but drivers can upgrade to the top trim for additional features.

2025 Toyota Camry Standard Features

  • Wireless smartphone charging
  • Push button start
  • Collision sensor
  • Blind Spot Monitor with Rear Cross Traffic Alert
  • Tire pressure monitoring system with individual tire pressure alerts

The Camry is comparable to popular medium-sized sedans like the Honda Accord and Hyundai Sonata. It has excellent efficiency thanks to a standard hybrid powertrain. Camry is also known for its resale value. Toyota’s redesigned medium-sized hybrid sedan is one of the most affordable options in the 2025 segment.

Why is operating range important?

The driving range may seem like an important specification at first glance, but it saves a lot of money on the pump driver. The more driving range a hybrid vehicle has, the less times the driver has to refuel the vehicle. Efficiency is important because vehicles with higher fuel efficiency travel more distances with the same amount of gas than vehicles with less efficient ones.

In an age of rising gas prices and significant inflation, operating range is more important than ever. Fortunately, for American drivers, there are plenty of hybrid models in the market that can maximize fuel efficiency and expand the range to record heights.

Most driving range car

  • 2025 Toyota Camry LE: 663 miles
  • 2025 Toyota Prius On: 632 Miles
  • 2025 Hyundai Sonata Hybrid SEL: 620 Miles
  • 2025 Hyundai Elantra Hybrid: 594 miles
  • 2025 Honda Hybrid EX-L contract: 550 miles

A new vision for the Democratic Party?

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good morning!🙋🏼‍♀️I’m Nicole Forelt. Groans about fever are the perfect way to deal with it.

Here’s the news on Wednesday:

Mamdani offers a twist on the NYC primary plot

Zoran Mamdani, 33, has only disrupted mainstream democratic politics. Members of the Democratic Socialist National Council were against expectations and took command of the mayoral primary in New York City on Tuesday.

The race served as a pioneer for the massive Democrats. The coalition seeking to repel former governor Andrew Cuomo framing the choices New Yorkers face between the party’s moderate political establishment, which lost the White House in November and the youthful, progressive vision.

  • The results are not official but Cuomo admitted the nomination within 90 minutes of closing at 9pm until announcing a momentary spill that took place in a poll ranking up to five options in July.
  • Ranked Race: The subsequent immediate spills where other candidate supporters are redistributed to Mamdani or Cuomo based on who is lower in the vote are expected to only increase Mamdani’s lead.
  • Sweats in polls: Big Apple Democrats voted despite choking the summer heat.

The US Strikes regained Iran’s nuclear program a few months later

According to a US government source familiar with the intelligence report, the assessment of the reserve Pentagon Intelligence has discovered US strikes over three Iranian nuclear facilities that have been set up by months. According to a second US official, early evidence shows that the bombing did not reach the depth needed to destroy the facility buried deep underground. Defense Secretary Pete Hegses rebutted the findings.

Read more about USA Today’s Middle East news:

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More news you need to know now

What’s the weather today? Check out your local forecast here.

Scotus operates colour gamut with immigration, porn, religion and healthcare

The Supreme Court decision coming Thursday will resolve whether President Donald Trump can implement his changes to birthright citizenship while his new policies are filing lawsuits. The ruling could make it difficult for judges to block the president’s policies. The judiciary also prevents minors from accessing online pornography and makes decisions about planned parent-child rebates, no matter how the state or the state makes. Other rulings determine whether certain drugs and services must be covered, such as HIV preventive medications, and whether federal programs that subsidize telephone and internet services through carrier fees are constitutional. Let’s see what this still comes.

What is “Wannial Catraz”?

Officials at the new immigration detention facility are calling “Alligator Alcatraz” to open in Florida’s Everglades next month, Florida Attorney General James Usmiel. On June 23, the federal government approved a proposal to open a 5,000-bed detention facility on 39 square miles of land in the Everglades, Uthmeier said in an interview posted to X. Uthmeier that the facility would house both detained immigrants from Florida and immigrants from other states in the country. Meanwhile, local supporters are calling for concern about the potential impact on the surrounding environment and the community.

Today’s speaker

Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders Get a 400% salary increase

This year, world-renowned Dallas Cowboys cheerleaders are visiting additional paychecks, up to adjust for a 400% salary increase. It’s a long battle for pay raises from cheerleaders, some of which only makes $15. Veterans and rookies are on different wage measures, with the former making more money with more experience. “Veterans have seen wages increase from the reported $15 to $60 per hour, with many appearances from teams outside the game,” said El Paso Times, part of the USA Today Network. They received an increase in compensation, but the group still has no health insurance from the team.

Today’s photo: Cool Off, Cincinnati!

Cincinnati sealed their victory in swelling heat on Tuesday night, facing the high-octane New York Yankees, earning a 5-4 Reds victory in 11 innings. The Reds’ top prospect Chase Burns made big league history and hit the first five batters he faced (including Aaron Judge). Here’s the Major League Baseball schedule and how to watch it on Wednesday:

Nicole Fallert is a newsletter writer for USA Today and sign up for your email here. Want to send a note to Nicole? Please email her at nollert@usatoday.com.

The Fed wasted border technology that allows drug detection

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In both Trump and Biden, US customs and border security are wasting millions with taxpayer funds and missing out on the opportunity to detect drugs.

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Federal agencies are tasked with intercepting illegal drugs at borders, and have lost the deployment of technology designed to do just that, according to federal watchdogs.

Investigators say U.S. customs and border protections may have wasted millions of people with taxpayer funds, drugs smuggled into the country and lost key tools to combat the fentanyl epidemic.

Mistreatment of the program from 2020 to 2024 spanned both the first Trump and Biden administrations.

At the time, Congress, facing a national crisis of fentanyl overdose, installed $570 million in CBP in fiscal 2019 by purchasing “non-intrusive testing technology” at land ports.

Known as “NII” for short, the technology uses x-rays or gamma rays to find suspicious items hidden in passenger cars on the US-Mexico border. Railway car or freight container. With luggage and packaging.

Between 2020 and 2024, investigators discovered that CBP purchased 150 large NII systems, but deployed and installed only 50. The rest is still being built during the review period. 43 other machines worth $96 million were stored.

According to the report, over 360 other NII systems have already been installed, but 166 or 46% were inoperable. Some were in ruins for almost a year.

“CBP did not follow the DHS acquisition policy, did not consider relevant information during planning, and did not have a clear maintenance and maintenance plan for the large NII system,” the investigator said in the report.

In a response included in the report, a senior CBP official said the report “lacks important context” because “NII is just one of multiple tools” used by customs officials to detect contraband.

CBP pursues a policy of “supporting border security through a layered approach that reduces overreliance on a single point or program.”

Moak has agreed to WatchDog’s recommendations for developing plans to deploy, install and maintain NII systems with a lifecycle cost of $6.9 billion, including purchases, installments, maintenance and final disposal.

Last year, CBP screened nearly 15 million passenger cars at ports along the US-Mexico border, according to Transportation Bureau statistics.

Heart attack deaths have been significantly reduced. This is what kills us instead

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Heart disease is the leading cause of death worldwide. However, new research shows that heart disease mortality rates over the past 50 years have decreased by 66% in American adults aged 25 and over. Better yet, heart attack deaths have been reduced by almost 90%.

“Over the last 50 years, our understanding of heart disease, its causes, and how we handle it has evolved quite a bit,” said Dr. Sarah King, a second-year internal medicine resident at Stanford University School of Medicine in California.

“There have been great progress in helping people survive early acute heart events that were once considered death sentences,” King said in a statement.

Unfortunately, there is a flip side to that positive news. In the United States, deaths from all other types of heart disease, including arrhythmia, heart failure, and hypertensive heart disease, increased by 81%, according to a study published in the Journal of the American Heart Association.

Dr Andrew Freeman, director of cardiovascular prevention and wellness for National Jewish Health in Denver, says it’s important to keep both numbers in perspective.

“The chances of death from a heart attack lately are relatively low compared to where it was, but the chances of a serious injury from a heart attack are still high,” said Freeman, who was not involved in the study.

“You may develop heart failure. Your heart can’t pump enough blood to meet your body’s needs and you’re always short of breath,” he said. “Or maybe you’re taking a lot of medications because of blood pressure, fluid retention, or cholesterol, and you don’t feel the best you have.

“Being alive is one thing. Being alive is another.”

This study analyzed government data on cardiac deaths between 1970 and 2022. In 1970, heart attacks were the cause of 54% of all deaths due to heart problems. By 2022, that number had fallen to 29%.

Death from atrial fibrillation and other arrhythmias occurs when electrical impulses in the heart startle and cause irregular heartbeats or “flap-ups” in the chest, but was rare in the 1970s. By 2022, that number had risen to 450%. This is about 4% of all heart disease deaths, the study found.

Heart failure deaths increased by 146% over the same period, while persistent hypertension deaths increased by 106%.

Changes in cardiovascular risk factors contribute to an increase in certain types of heart disease, the study said. Obesity, type 2 diabetes, hypertension, poor food choices, and physical inertility have skyrocketed over the past 50 years. The prevalence of obesity increased from 15% in 1970 to 40% in 2022, the study found. Type 2 diabetes and prediabetes currently affect almost half of all adults in the United States. Hypertension has increased from 30% in 1978 to nearly 50% in 2022.

Another potential contributor – the aging baby boomer population has reached a time when it is most likely to develop heart disease.

“All of these risk factors contribute to the ongoing burden of heart disease, particularly those associated with heart failure, hypertensive heart disease and arrhythmias,” says Dr. Lhasa Paraniapan, professor of cardiovascular medicine for research at Stanford University School of Medicine.

“The heart disease has not disappeared,” Paraniapan said in a statement. “Now we have to focus on helping people age with a strong and healthy mind by preventing events, and prevention can start as a child.”

Inspired by the weekly roundups on living well, which have become simple. Sign up CNN’s Life, But Better Newsletter About information and tools designed to improve your well-being.

Why are all business leaders participating in AI?

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Artificial intelligence is no longer a futuristic buzzword – it is a strategic obligation. To today’s C-Suite executives, AI offers far more than automation. When deployed wisely, it is a tool to unlock growth, induce innovation, and enhance smarter decision-making.

“Most leaders at this point use AI to find productivity gains, save costs and reduce staff,” said Amy Webb, CEO of The Future Today Todary Group, a New York consulting firm specializing in strategic forecasting. “But the real opportunity is top line growth” – identify the next wave of innovation and creativity, implement those ideas, and more effectively identify future plans.

To use AI strategically, leaders need to first understand what kinds of things they deal with.

What is the difference between analytical AI and generation AI?

According to Tom Davenport, professor of IT and Management at Babson College in Wellesley, Massachusetts, Generator AI, which creates content such as text, images, product ideas, and more, Tom Davenport, executive at Babson College: Analytics AI, in Wellesley, Massachusetts.

For manufacturing or logistics companies, analytics AI can predict equipment failures and optimize pricing, he said. For media, legal, or marketing people, generative AI can dramatically increase the creation of content.

For example, Colgate-Palmolive uses the generation AI to simulate customer responses to new products, while Kroger’s Analytics AI predicts the nightly inventory needs of all grocery stores.

Why should AI be on the human side of artificial intelligence or on the human side of artificial intelligence?

Despite the power of AI, experts claim that they are always keeping humans in the loop.

Seeing AI as a Job Killer is shortsighted, said Thomas Malone is professor Patrick J. McGovern of the MIT Sloan Management School of Management and founding director of the MIT Collective Intelligence Center. He sees it as a collaborator, not a competitor.

Executives said, “How can we make this technology (along with its generation) so that it can create new jobs and make more profits by using new ideas about new types of products and services?” Malone, author of “Supermind: Thinking the incredible power of people and computers together.”

Davenport wants an expanded mindset that deploys AI to enhance employees rather than replacing them. “Most of these technologies are not powerful or accurate enough to be used without human intervention,” he said.

What are the risks of AI beyond rewards?

Embracing AI poses risks — but they are not pop culture concepts where robots take our jobs and kill us while we’re sleeping, says Webb, author of The Big Nine: The Tech Titans and how their thinking machines distort humanity.

One of the top risks is data collapse. The way information becomes outdated quickly can undermine the effectiveness of AI that relies on it, she said.

Excessive reliance on external partners is another risk.

“We see many organizations, big and small, bringing an army of consultants,” a short-term victory sets long-term flaws, Webb said. “We don’t develop skills (and remaining) that we rely on future consultants, creating great vulnerabilities.”

The third risk, she said, focuses on policy and regulatory uncertainty. This means that businesses may have to constantly change gears as laws evolve.

Experts say that AI needs to be rooted in business strategy, not only handed over to it.

Embedding it throughout the company is more effective than trying to manage it from above, Malone said. When many employees try out AI while providing support and training, it offers opportunities large and small, and can spread AI knowledge across the enterprise.

“There’s a greater risk of trying to pilot it than trying to get more flowers,” he said.

With the evolution of AI’s rapid launch, leaders need to be free from being enveloped in today’s capabilities, Webb said. Rather, they should guide AI to strategic foresight. You need to build a long-term data-driven planning scenario rather than a narrow focus for the next few quarters or years.

“Today’s decisions on artificial intelligence have an echoing effect for decades, at the business level and at the social level,” she said.

Leaders need to plunge into AI without waiting for others to show the way, Davenport said. It means training people, developing good data and understanding how AI fits into your business.

“Don’t think you’ll be a fast follower in this area,” he said. “The idea that you can catch up very quickly without making any early mistakes your competitors make is probably not a good idea. It takes too long for it to really get better.

AI is one case where the hype about conversion is real.

“This technology can change business at least as much as the internet.

“Super Coral” and Supplements: Inside the Lab to Save the Great Barrier Reef

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Editor’s Note: Call to Earth is a CNN edited series that promises to report on the environmental challenges the planet faces, along with solutions. Rolex’s Permanent Planet Initiative is partnering with CNN to promote awareness and education on key sustainability issues and encourage positive action.



CNN

Australia’s iconic Great Barrier Reef is the largest living structure on the planet, with a vast variety of species. However, in recent years it has been hit by a series of devastating mass bleaching events, turning the vibrant colors of some of the reefs into bright whites.

Around the world, corals suffer similar fates, with over 80% of the oceanic coral reefs hit ongoing global bleaching events launched in 2023, with ocean temperatures recorded. Bleaching is fatal as corals live in them and algae that serve as food sources are depleted.

The effect can be devastating. Coral reefs make up only 0.01% of the seabed, but they support a quarter of all marine life, provide food and livelihoods for people, helping to reduce storm surges and protect against erosion.

At this month’s UN Marine Conference, 11 countries signed a pledge to protect climate-resistant coral reefs, and separately the government and partners pledged $25 million to the Coral Reef Global Fund.

Ultimately, if coral reefs are saved, efforts to curb ocean warming by reducing carbon emissions should be strengthened. However, scientists are also looking for other solutions to keep the reef alive in a warm world.

The coral bleached white from the ocean heat waves.

At Sydney Institute of Technology, future Leaf Team scientists are looking for “super corals.” This is a species that is naturally resilient to changes in the environment, such as high temperatures, acidity, and low oxygen levels. One of the goals of the program is to identify these corals, discover the methods they are using to survive, and use them as a blueprint to support other corals in the harsh environment of the future.

“We’re focused on trying to understand reef resilience in a changing environment,” says Dr. Emma Camp, a marine biologist and future leader of the Reef Team. “How do we build coral resilience to survive the stress they inevitably face?

Camp first discovered “Super Coral” species naturally grown in high temperature, acidic mangrove lagoons. Since then, she says the team has found up to 40 species of these hardy species growing in a variety of environments around the world. Now their focus is on finding them within the Great Barrier Reef.

“(We want to increase heat resistance and identify coral species, but it still maintains other properties that are really important. We hope they are fast growers, says Christine Roper, a postdoctoral researcher on the team.

During the expedition to the Great Barrier Reef, the team collects and analyzes specific coral species. They perform real-time heat tolerance tests on the samples using a special phenotypic device machine that helps to predict which corals are most likely to survive as water temperatures rise. It also allows coral fragments to be returned to the lab, DNA is extracted and tested for a wider range of purposes.

Once they identify stress-resistant species, the coral care programme – a project co-founded by a large-scale repotting camp in collaboration with local tourism operators and indigenous communities – It spreads to coral nursery schools established in various locations in the Great Barrier Reef. They then “off” them with coral reefs that help to recover areas affected by bleaching.

Since the programme began in 2018, over 125,000 corals have been planted throughout the Great Barrier Reef off Cairns, Port Douglas and Whitsunday, with a survival rate of 85%.

The Great Barrier Reef covers a vast area of ​​the Pacific Ocean off the coast of northeastern Australia.

However, restoring the area of ​​the Great Barrier Reef is not an easy task. There are almost 3,000 individual coral reefs, covering 344,400 square kilometers (133,000 square miles), and as of April 2024, 60% of the reefs have been exposed to recent invasions. The team hopes that the areas where outplants have been performed already show visible signs of recovery.

Other labs around the world are developing similar solutions, with promising results. The Australian Institute of Marine Science (AIMS) uses artificial selection and selective reproduction to raise heat-resistant corals, and reports that genetic interventions may work, but have had a variety of successes across species. Newcastle University in the UK selectively raises corals that say they have not yet conducted large-scale trials in the wild but can better survive the ocean heat wave.

Research shows that traditional coral recovery efforts could be cancelled within a few years if there is a bleaching event, but by planting heat-resistant corals, coral nurturing programs hope that the restoration can withstand future events. “By focusing our efforts on identifying and increasing the abundance of heat-resistant corals in our population, we optimize our efforts by increasing resilience for future heat stress events,” says Roper.

Whether naturally or selectively reared corals, the main challenge is how to expand the labour-intensive and costly planting process.

Therefore, the focus of the coral care programme was to attract tourism operators and the local community. “We can build scale by having a pocket of the community that takes on these actions,” Camp says.

Working with seven tourist operators on the Great Barrier Reef, including the wavelength reef cruise, tourist-paid snorkeling trips to the reefs are doubled as instilling expeditions. On these trips, members of the crew, all trained divers and marine biologists, tend to have plant corals nursed and conduct local surveys. The Wavelength team helped establish the program at CAMP, operated coral nursery along the reefs and collected data on coral health.

Still, there are limits to how much you can achieve just by planting strict coral species. Future Leaf Teams are also investigating other solutions, including whether corals may nourish different foods and vitamins.

Corals feed by reaching tentacles from their bodies to capture microscopic food particles. Previous studies have shown that feeding the zoo (a small animal floating near the surface) after a bleaching event can help increase resilience, allowing corals to grow on substrates injected with metal nutrients such as manganese and zinc. However, such methods have not yet been tried on a large scale.

“Even though I know a lot about corals, I know very little about the nutritional aspects of corals,” says Camp. “This is a field that, for me, really helps us to advance our recovery practices by understanding more about what research and science needs to fundamentally survive stress.”

Scientists collect coral samples for testing.

Early on, the team returning to Sydney’s lab has been doing experiments to feed coral foods such as microscopic brine shrimp fed various types of algae, and add specific metals or vitamins to the water the coral absorbs.

The goal is to develop supplements that can provide extra nutrients when stressed by corals, helping them survive or recover from heavy bleaching events.

“It’s like we humans. When we’re running, we might take supplements to give us a boost. That’s the same as corals,” says Camp.

“What we have to explore is these types of new ideas, and if we do nothing, the end result is a loss of coral reefs around the world,” she says.

While we hope that scientific innovation and scalable solutions can provide some kind of stop for the reef, Camp warns that protecting them in the long term will result in tackling the causes of mass coral bleaching.

“There’s a lot you can do to buy reef time,” she says. “We need to tackle climate change because if temperatures continue to rise, many of the corals will ask them to survive in the environment they face.”

The Supreme Court’s main decisions coming up on Trump, pornography and religion

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WASHINGTON – The Supreme Court is heading for the home stretch for the biggest case of the year.

The decision coming soon on June 26th will settle whether President Donald Trump can implement his changes to birthright citizenship while his new policies are filing lawsuits. The ruling could make it difficult for judges to block the president’s policies.

The judiciary also issues decisions on how states do not protect the state by preventing minors from accessing online pornography and repaying planned parent-child relationships. Other rulings determine whether certain medications and services must be covered, such as HIV-preventing medications and cholesterol-lowering medications, and whether federal programs that subsidize telephone and internet services through carrier fees are constitutional.

The Supreme Court must again decide the end of three cases filed by religious groups this year. Justice will say whether parents should be allowed to remove elementary school students from their class when the LGBTQ+ character storybook is being read.

The court’s pending opinions regarding Louisiana’s legislative districts not only affect the 2026 election, but could also affect the state’s ability to consider race when eliciting legislative boundaries.

The court has already published major gun rulings, treatment for transgender minors, “reverse discrimination,” and how the Americans with Disabilities Act protects or protects retirees and supports students who need a professional learning plan.

Let’s see what this still comes:

Basement citizenship: Limiting challenges to Trump’s power

Trump’s executive order has been held back by judges across the country who have determined that limiting birthright citizenship is probably unconstitutional.

During the oral debate on May 15, none of the Supreme Court justices expressed support for the Trump administration’s theory on the issue. The administration says Trump’s order is consistent with the citizenship clause of the 14th Amendment and past Supreme Court decisions regarding that provision.

However, some justices have expressed concern about the ability of one judge to stop laws and executive orders from coming into force anywhere in the country while it is being challenged.

From verbal discussions it was unclear how courts would find ways to limit nationally or “universal” orders, and what it would mean for birthright citizenship and many other Trump policies challenged by courts.

Don’t prevent students from seeing LGBTQ+ books and minors from watching porn

The conservative majority of the court heard sympathetic to his Maryland parents in April.

And when the website concerns Texas’ requirement to ensure that users are over 18 years old, one justice has expressed her own parental dissatisfaction with trying to control what her child is seeing on the internet. Judge Amy Coney Barrett, who has seven children, said he knows from his personal experience how difficult it is to keep up with content blocking devices that Texas law has been offered as a better alternative.

However, it is necessary to reconsider the judiciary, as it may find that while it is sympathetic to the purpose of Texas law, it may find that the lower courts have not thoroughly considered whether they violated the adult’s first right to amendment.

The future of planning parents and preventive care scope

Unlike last year, when the court reviewed two cases of abortion access, the hot button issue was not just before the court. However, the judiciary is deciding whether to support South Carolina’s efforts to deprive the parent-child relationship that plans public funding for other health services to provide abortions.

The question is whether the law allows Medicaid patients to sue South Carolina to exclude planned custody from the Medicaid program. The court’s decision could affect care options beyond the controversial realm of women’s breeding health care.

And in the latest conservative challenge to Obamacare, Justice is considering whether health insurance companies should provide free access to task force-recommended cancer screening, cholesterol-lowering medications and other preventive health services.

Internet grants and federal agency authority

The future of the $8 billion federal program, which grants high-speed internet and telephone services to millions of Americans, will be determined in cases where Congress raises questions about how many Congress can “delegate” to federal agencies.

Conservative groups argue that communications programs are funded by unconstitutional taxes, as private managers overseen by the Federal Communications Commission estimate whether funds need to be distributed, collected fees and raised each quarter.

Racial gerrymandering and black voting power

The challenge to the map of Louisiana’s legislature by non-black voters tests that the balance law must attack while not discriminating against other voters while still adhering to civil rights laws that protect the power of racial minorities.

The results also determine whether the state can maintain the map that has given the advantages to Democrats in conflict districts. This is a decision that could make a difference in what could become a close fight for House control in the 2026 medium-term elections.

Aaron Rodgers on whether this next NFL season will be his last: “I’m sure this is that.”

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Pittsburgh Steelers quarterback Aaron Rodgers revealed Tuesday that he believes this upcoming NFL season could be the last in the league.

“Yeah, I’m pretty sure of this,” 41-year-old Rodgers told “The Pat McCuffy Show.”

“So we just signed a one-year deal. The Steelers didn’t have to spend any more years on that extra years. This was really about ending with a lot of love, fun and peace for the career I had.

“I played 20 years of weird years. It was fun in the long run. I enjoyed it more than (head coach) Mike Tomlin and one of the Cornerstone franchises with great guys and great guys and great groups in the city that you’re hoping to win.”

After months of speculation, Rodgers signed a one-year contract earlier this month, becoming the Steelers who began quarterback, setting another fascinating chapter in his Hall of Fame career.

Both Rogers and the Steelers are looking for more Super Bowl success. Pittsburgh last won the franchise’s sixth Super Bowl title, the Lombardi Trophy, on February 1, 2009. Coincidentally, it was Rogers and the Green Bay Packers who defeated the Steelers in their final Super Bowl appearance on February 6th, 2011.

Back on the first day of Pittsburgh’s mandatory minicamp, he said that despite being the oldest quarterback in the league, he’s still playing because that’s what he wants to do.

“I don’t need it. I don’t need it because of my ego, I don’t need it to keep playing it,” Rodgers told reporters. “Many decisions I have made from my career and life strictly from ego to life, even if they do well – are not always satisfied.

“But the decisions from the soul are usually pretty fulfilling. So this was the best decision for my soul. I felt like I was here with my coach (Tomlin).

Rogers’ signature saga split a lot into consideration given the length of time. Most notably, Steelers legend Terry Bradshaw said the former Packers and New York Jets star didn’t want them close to their team, but with four NFL MVPs at the helm, the Steelers look like a formidable device.

He’s been away from two disappointing seasons with the Jets. This includes losing to Achilles, whose only four plays in his first year with the franchise, was broken.