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    • 'It looked like a hurricane shelter' after flights canceled

      'It looked like a hurricane shelter' after flights canceled

      Travelers were left stranded after Spirit Airlines canceled 233 flights Monday, or 30 percent of those scheduled, on top of the 165 canceled Sunday.

      Where airline pinned the blame »
      • Biden's plans stunted after dejected experts fled Trump

        Biden's plans stunted after dejected experts fled Trump

      • Anger mounts over Biden's use of 'inhumane' policy

        Anger mounts over Biden's use of 'inhumane' policy

      • Bacon may disappear in Calif. as pig rules take effect

        Bacon may disappear in Calif. as pig rules take effect

      • Vaccine misinformation spread by local media

        Vaccine misinformation spread by local media

      • Collectors are scooping up unwanted Olympic medals

        Collectors are scooping up unwanted Olympic medals

    • Co-founder of billion-dollar, Dallas-based real estate firm killed in plane crash
      Business
      Fort Worth Star-Telegram

      Co-founder of billion-dollar, Dallas-based real estate firm killed in plane crash

      John Kenneth “Den” Dunn, the co-founder of a real estate firm headquartered in Dallas, died July 26 in an airplane crash, The Rainier Companies said Monday. Dunn joined Tim Nichols in 2003 to create Rainier Capital Management as a platform for real estate investment. The firm has closed in excess of $2.5 billion of investment assets and currently has an operating portfolio valued at more than $1.6 billion, according to the company's website.

    • Groom still in his wedding tux accused of shooting two, including bride's alleged lover, in mid-traffic dispute
      U.S.
      Washington Examiner

      Groom still in his wedding tux accused of shooting two, including bride's alleged lover, in mid-traffic dispute

      A Louisiana man was arrested in his wedding tuxedo over the weekend for allegedly shooting his friend and chasing his new bride down the interstate after accusing the two of having an affair, according to police. Devin Jose Jones, 30, was driving with his wife and friend after leaving their marriage ceremony on Saturday when the three got stuck in I-10 traffic near LaPlace in St. John the Baptist Parish, Sheriff Mike Tregre said. A second male victim in a nearby vehicle was also struck in the hand by a stray bullet, Tregre said.

    • Coronavirus latest news: Children glued to screens during lockdown twice as likely to become short-sighted
      World
      The Telegraph

      Coronavirus latest news: Children glued to screens during lockdown twice as likely to become short-sighted

      AM Covid app tweaked to alert fewer people and end 'pingdemic' The NHS app has been updated so that fewer people will be asked to self-isolate in a government U-turn designed to end the disruption caused by the "pingdemic". Under new programming, only those who have been in contact with an asymptomatic case in the past 48 hours will be pinged. Previously, the app traced contacts back five days for both symptomatic and asymptomatic infections, even though previous studies have shown that people become infectious one to two days before the onset of symptoms and are unlikely to spread the virus earlier.

      • England changes COVID-19 app so fewer people need to isolate
        England changes COVID-19 app so fewer people need to isolate
        Reuters
      • Covid app tweaked to alert fewer people and end ‘pingdemic’ chaos
        Covid app tweaked to alert fewer people and end ‘pingdemic’ chaos
        The Telegraph
    • A Canadian diver who scored a 0 with a feet-first flop with the finals on the line said she wasn't going to give up
      Sports
      INSIDER

      A Canadian diver who scored a 0 with a feet-first flop with the finals on the line said she wasn't going to give up

      The Canadian diver Pamela Ware scored a 0.0 with a feet-first dive in the Olympics. The failed dive knocked Ware out of competition for the event final. In an emotional video, Ware said she made a mistake but would not give up.

    • Iran's outgoing president says the country's authoritarian government doesn't always tell the truth
      World
      Business Insider

      Iran's outgoing president says the country's authoritarian government doesn't always tell the truth

      Iran's outgoing president said the government was not always truthful during his eight-year tenure. Iran's authoritarian government is not known for its transparency and has little tolerance for dissent. Iranian President Hassan Rouhani, who is leaving office this week, on Sunday said the country's authoritarian government was not always truthful during his eight years in office.

    • Former dancer Valarie Allman wins U.S. first Olympic track and field gold in Tokyo
      Sports
      Axios

      Former dancer Valarie Allman wins U.S. first Olympic track and field gold in Tokyo

      Valarie Allman won Team USA's first gold track and field Olympic gold medal in Tokyo on Monday, in the discus throw finals. The big picture: Allman is the first American woman to medal in the discus throw since 2008. Her 68.98-meter throw beat German silver medalist Kristin Pudenz's throw by more than two meters.

      • Olympics-Athletics-American Allman all smiles after winning discus gold
        Olympics-Athletics-American Allman all smiles after winning discus gold
        Reuters
      • Former Dancer Valarie Allman Wins Gold Medal in Women's Discus for Team USA: 'I Am So Honored'
        Former Dancer Valarie Allman Wins Gold Medal in Women's Discus for Team USA: 'I Am So Honored'
        People
    • An unofficial Burning Man is happening in the middle of the desert without any medical services, private jets, or professionally serviced bathrooms
      U.S.
      Business Insider

      An unofficial Burning Man is happening in the middle of the desert without any medical services, private jets, or professionally serviced bathrooms

      COVID-19 canceled Burning Man two years in a row. Without medical services, private jets, or bathrooms, "Renegade Man" attendees are on their own. Initially created as a desert rendezvous for free spirits and bohemians, Burning Man has grown into one of the world's most famous festivals.

    • News
      Associated Press Videos

      Vaccine mandates & dorm food, the new college tour

      NYU is starting in-person college tours again for the first time in 16 months. Normally questions about admissions dominate the conversation, but this year student tour guides also have to be ready to answer vaccines mandate questions. Aug.

    • A Florida woman who said she and her family were afraid to get vaccinated is now urging people to get their shots after she her father and brother died from COVID-19 in 1 week
      U.S.
      INSIDER

      A Florida woman who said she and her family were afraid to get vaccinated is now urging people to get their shots after she her father and brother died from COVID-19 in 1 week

      A Florida woman is calling on people to get the vaccine after losing family members to COVID-19, CNN reported. Payten McCall told the outlet her father and brother died from the virus just days apart last week. Unvaccinated people comprise an overwhelming number of hospitalizations amid the Delta variant's spread.

      • The Latest: Health official says masks protect unvaccinated
        The Latest: Health official says masks protect unvaccinated
        Associated Press
      • Alabama family encouraging people to get COVID-19 vaccine after son dies from virus
        Alabama family encouraging people to get COVID-19 vaccine after son dies from virus
        CBS News Videos
    • 24 vaccinated friends had a blowout vacation on Cape Cod. Though their symptoms were mild, 14 of them caught COVID-19, report says.
      Health
      Business Insider

      24 vaccinated friends had a blowout vacation on Cape Cod. Though their symptoms were mild, 14 of them caught COVID-19, report says.

      Twenty-four fully vaccinated friends had a weeklong July 4 getaway in Provincetown, Massachusetts. The cases were part of a bigger study that prompted the CDC to change its indoor masking guidance. Fourteen of 24 vaccinated friends who visited the Cape Cod town of Provincetown, Massachusetts, in July caught COVID-19, Bloomberg reported on Sunday.

      • What does the Provincetown COVID outbreak teach us about the delta variant?
        What does the Provincetown COVID outbreak teach us about the delta variant?
        WLS – Chicago
      • MA Outbreak of 900 COVID Cases Leads to Only 7 Hospitalizations: 'The Vaccines Are Working'
        MA Outbreak of 900 COVID Cases Leads to Only 7 Hospitalizations: 'The Vaccines Are Working'
        People
    • Mao pins worn by Chinese athletes may test Olympic rules
      World
      Associated Press

      Mao pins worn by Chinese athletes may test Olympic rules

      The image of Communist China's founding leader, Mao Zedong, made an unscheduled appearance at the Tokyo Olympics, and the International Olympic Committee said Tuesday it is “looking into the matter.” The gesture — Mao pin badges worn by two Chinese gold medalists at their medal ceremony — risks being judged a breach of Olympic Charter Rule 50, which prohibits political statements on the podium at the Tokyo Games — and at the upcoming 2022 Beijing Winter Games. After winning the women's sprint in track cycling Monday, Bao Shanju and Zhong Tianshi wore pin badges of Mao.

      • Olympics Latest: Biles warming up for Olympic beam final
        Olympics Latest: Biles warming up for Olympic beam final
        Associated Press
      • Olympics-Chinese champions wear Mao badges on cycling podium
        Olympics-Chinese champions wear Mao badges on cycling podium
        Reuters
    • A Waffle House waitress who worked a double shift while looking after her baby says she received a $1,000 tip from a country-music star who was impressed by her work ethic
      Business
      Business Insider

      A Waffle House waitress who worked a double shift while looking after her baby says she received a $1,000 tip from a country-music star who was impressed by her work ethic

      A Waffle House waitress said she received a $1,000 tip from a country-music star. A Waffle House waitress said a country-music star left her a $1,000 tip because he was so impressed by her work ethic. Shirell Lackey told Fox 8 News, a Fox affiliate in Greensboro, North Carolina, last week that the musician, who she wanted to keep anonymous, had found out she was working a double shift while looking after her baby daughter at the restaurant.

    • Online creator Chris Chan arrested on incest charge after leaked audio alleged she had sex with her mother
      U.S.
      INSIDER

      Online creator Chris Chan arrested on incest charge after leaked audio alleged she had sex with her mother

      Christine Weston Chandler, known online as Chris Chan, was arrested on a charge of incest. Christian Weston Chandler, known online as Chris Chan, has been arrested and charged with incest after a leaked phone conversation spread online. Chandler, 39, is currently being held in the Henrico County Jail after being brought in by police on Sunday afternoon.

    • Olympics-Athletics-Post-Bolt generation of sprinters kick off hunt for 200m crown
      Sports
      Reuters

      Olympics-Athletics-Post-Bolt generation of sprinters kick off hunt for 200m crown

      For the first time since 2008, the 200 metres will be without triple Olympic champion Usain Bolt of Jamaica and a new generation of sprinters began their bids to succeed him on Tuesday with Team USA particularly impressive in early heats. Bolt, who won 200m golds at three consecutive Olympics, retired in 2017 and the United States are bidding to reclaim the title. The Americans last won a gold in the men's 200m event in the 2004 Olympics, when they ran the table and won all three medals.

    • U.S.
      The Week

      Minnesota man's yard is now a destination for all the dogs in his neighborhood

      When he moved into his new home, Keith Roles found a surefire way to become the most popular person in the neighborhood — he started handing out dog treats from his front yard. "I never thought — ever, ever thought — it would turn into this," Roles told KARE 11. Keith and his wife, Linda, live in Apple Valley, Minnesota, and thanks to those treats, quickly got to know their neighbors.

    • 'Homecoming': 100 years after forceful removal, Native American tribe celebrate reclaimed land in Oregon
      U.S.
      USA TODAY

      'Homecoming': 100 years after forceful removal, Native American tribe celebrate reclaimed land in Oregon

      Forced removal Wheeler is a descendent of Chief Joseph, one of the several Nez Perce leaders who fought tirelessly to protect the Nez Perce tribe and its land. Chief Joseph was among the Nez Perce who refused to abide by the 1863 treaty that had stripped the tribe from 90% of its land and required the move to the Idaho reservation. War broke out in 1877 when Gen. Oliver O. Howard attempted to force non-treaty Nez Perce from the land.

    • US considering ‘next steps’ as it warns Iran it will respond to deadly attack on oil tanker in international waters
      U.S.
      Washington Examiner

      US considering ‘next steps’ as it warns Iran it will respond to deadly attack on oil tanker in international waters

      The new categories include: Afghans who work or worked as employees of contractors, locally employed staff, interpreters/translators for the U.S. government, U.S. Forces Afghanistan, International Security Assistance Force or Resolute Support; Afghans who work or worked for a U.S. government-funded program or project in Afghanistan supported through a U.S. government grant or cooperative agreement; Afghans who are or were employed in Afghanistan by a U.S.-based media organization or nongovernmental organization.

    • I'm a personal trainer in the Hamptons. The job perks are incredible, but every now and then I'll get an odd request that has nothing to do with my job.
      Lifestyle
      Business Insider

      I'm a personal trainer in the Hamptons. The job perks are incredible, but every now and then I'll get an odd request that has nothing to do with my job.

      When it comes to working with the 1%, convenience is a key factor, so I often train my clients virtually or in their homes. It's best to meet them where they're at, and in my case, that's the Hamptons. I launched Hamptons Wellness on Wheels in 2016 with my boyfriend Ross Youmans.

    • After decades of invisibility, asexuals are speaking up and gaining ground: ‘I don’t need to be fixed because I’m not broken.’
      Lifestyle
      Chicago Tribune

      After decades of invisibility, asexuals are speaking up and gaining ground: ‘I don’t need to be fixed because I’m not broken.’

      When you look out at the world and you don't see anything that looks like your experience or sounds like your experience, the world is like a funhouse mirror. It's reflecting a distorted version of what's true, so you feel like a broken version of yourself. Asexuals made up 1% of the population in an influential analysis of survey results from more than 18,000 British people that was published in the Journal of Sex Research in 2004.

    • Daughter of NFL legend makes a leap of faith at Tokyo Olympics
      Sports
      CBS News

      Daughter of NFL legend makes a leap of faith at Tokyo Olympics

      Vashti Cunningham was determined to win gold at the 2016 Olympic Games in Rio de Janeiro. Vashti took a deep breath, closed her eyes, then tried to focus on one thing: a 4-pound, white bar — the only thing that stood between her and a shot at earning a medal. Vashti left wanting to quit the sport, and as her teammate embraced her, she broke into tears.

    • ‘No one’s invincible’: fresh mask mandates and rising Delta cases hit California
      Health
      The Guardian

      ‘No one’s invincible’: fresh mask mandates and rising Delta cases hit California

      A surge in Covid-19 infections, driven by the highly contagious Delta variant, has prompted San Francisco and six other counties in California's Bay Area to reimpose mask mandates for indoor spaces, less than two months after experts in the highly vaccinated region celebrated what they hoped would be a return to normal. In recent days, San Francisco's infection rates have surged to nearly 20 times what they were at their lowest point in June and two of the city's hospitals have reported that more than 200 of their own workers have tested positive for the virus. “It teaches us that no one is invincible,” said Dr Peter Chin-Hong, an associate dean at UCSF who specializes in infectious diseases.

      • We have two weapons to fight COVID, 'One is masks, the other is vaccines': One Medical Regional Medical Director
        We have two weapons to fight COVID, 'One is masks, the other is vaccines': One Medical Regional Medical Director
        Yahoo Finance Video
      • U.S. cases and deaths from COVID-19 rise, so do vaccinations -U.S. officials
        U.S. cases and deaths from COVID-19 rise, so do vaccinations -U.S. officials
        Reuters
    • US authorities likely encountered 210,000 migrants trying to cross border illegally in July
      U.S.
      Washington Examiner

      US authorities likely encountered 210,000 migrants trying to cross border illegally in July

      U.S. authorities likely encountered upwards of 210,000 migrants attempting to traverse the southern border illegally in July, which would not just be a sharp increase from June but also the highest monthly number in more than 20 years. Preliminary apprehension figures were disclosed by David Shahoulian, assistant secretary for border and immigration policy at the Homeland Security Department, preceding the release of U.S. Customs and Border Protection's official numbers for the month in which the summer heat can prove deadly for those making the journey. Around 80,000 people in family groups were apprehended by authorities, a number shy of the all-time record of 88,857 in May 2019, though exceedingly more than the 55,805 in June.

    • U.S. hits 70 percent Covid vaccination goal — a month later than Biden had hoped to
      U.S.
      NBC News

      U.S. hits 70 percent Covid vaccination goal — a month later than Biden had hoped to

      Seventy percent of American adults have received at least one dose of a Covid-19 vaccine, officials said Monday, reaching a goal President Joe Biden had hoped to reach a month ago. The goal was ambitious, but Monday's development is a good step, White House press secretary Jen Psaki said. As of Monday, more than 180.7 million people in the U.S. ages 18 or older, or 70 percent, have received at least one dose of a Covid-19 vaccine, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

      • White House says work not done as Biden's 70 percent vaccination goal is reached
        White House says work not done as Biden's 70 percent vaccination goal is reached
        Yahoo News Video
      • U.S. hits Biden's 70% vaccine goal as holdouts in hot spots like Florida and Louisiana rush to get shots
        U.S. hits Biden's 70% vaccine goal as holdouts in hot spots like Florida and Louisiana rush to get shots
        Yahoo News
    • These Photos Show The Enormous Turnout For Lollapalooza Despite Delta Concerns
      Entertainment
      BuzzFeed News

      These Photos Show The Enormous Turnout For Lollapalooza Despite Delta Concerns

      Lollapalooza was held this past weekend in Chicago, with an estimated 100,000 people flocking to the city's Grant Park for each day of the four-day music festival. After the festival was canceled last year due to the COVID-19 pandemic, revelers enjoyed sets from acts such as Miley Cyrus, Post Malone, the Foo Fighters, and Megan Thee Stallion. The festival went ahead despite surging cases of the Delta variant of the novel coronavirus both in Chicago and across the country.

      • DaBaby booted from Lollapalooza after homophobic comments
        DaBaby booted from Lollapalooza after homophobic comments
        Associated Press
      • Even Without A Deadly Pandemic, Lollapalooza Did Not Look Fun
        Even Without A Deadly Pandemic, Lollapalooza Did Not Look Fun
        Refinery29
    • Olympics-World record on the track as IOC probes Belarus over sprinter
      Sports
      Reuters

      Olympics-World record on the track as IOC probes Belarus over sprinter

      The Olympics governing body was probing Belarus's treatment of an athlete seeking refuge in Poland while Norway's Karsten Warholm smashed a world record on the track and Simone Biles was set for a highly anticipated return to the gymnastics stage on Tuesday. The International Olympic Committee said it expected a report https://www.reuters.com/article/olympics-2020-ioc/update-1-olympics-ioc-awaiting-report-from-belarusian-olympic-committee-idUSL8N2PA0F4 later in the day from the Belarusian team on the case of sprinter Krystsina Tsimanouskaya, who sought refuge https://www.reuters.com/lifestyle/sports/belarus-athlete-in-hands-authorities-ioc-2021-08-02 in the Polish embassy on Monday after refusing her team's orders to fly home.

      • Belarusian sprinter says country removed her from Olympic events for speaking out about coaches
        Belarusian sprinter says country removed her from Olympic events for speaking out about coaches
        Yahoo Sports
      • Olympics-IOC awaiting report from Belarusian Olympic committee
        Olympics-IOC awaiting report from Belarusian Olympic committee
        Reuters
    Will the Child Tax Credit cut poverty?
    • “[The program] stands likely to leave millions of families — disproportionately the poorest and most fragile ones — behind.”

    • “[Paying] families monthly, instead of one lump sum ... will provide parents with more stability knowing when cash is coming.”

    • “More parents will disappear from the workforce, and more children will be locked into dependency.”

    • “Poverty is a political choice, not an inevitability.”

    • “Time is running out. There are only six months until monthly payments of the credit cease."

    Read the 360