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Prince George's Sweet Soccer Celebration Caught on Camera

Footage of the young royal embracing his parents at a soccer game has gone viral on social media.
Read full article on: newsweek.com
5 strategies for dealing with today's high mortgage rates
Mortgage rates are hovering above 7%, but there are still ways to lock in a decent mortgage deal right now.
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cbsnews.com
Rumer Willis hopes being transparent about Bruce Willis' health will give people hope
Bruce Willis is great amid dementia battle, Rumer Willis says. 'My dad is so beloved, and that’s been so evident in the transparency with which we’ve been sharing.'
latimes.com
T.J. Holmes and Amy Robach Empathize with Fired ABC News Colleague Rob Marciano
Lorenzo Bevilaqua/Disney General Entertainment Content via Getty ImagesAmy Robach and T.J. Holmes, the now publicly-coupled former ABC News anchors who were ousted from their network last year after reports of their affair hit the tabloids—both were married to other people at the time—offered words of support to Rob Marciano, a longtime ABC News meteorologist who was reportedly fired this week, via their joint podcast on Friday. Marciano, a senior meteorologist for ABC News, was terminated this week after chief meteorologist Ginger Zee overheard accounts of Marciano getting into a “heated screaming match” with a Good Morning America producer; Zee reported the incident to the network, leading to Marciano’s ousting, sources told The Daily Beast on Wednesday. “It’s tough situation,” Robach said, on the latest episode of the Amy and T.J. podcast. “Yes, we have walked down that road and it’s not an easy one. And I know he also has, and I think he might still be going through a divorce. So, we know what it’s like to have your entire life upended, career and personal life.”Read more at The Daily Beast.
thedailybeast.com
Man drives car towards crowd at Portland State University, uses pepper spray
This driver sped towards a crowd of people at Portland State University, where pro-Palestinian protesters had gathered, and used "some kind of pepper spray," according to police.
edition.cnn.com
Odell Beckham Jr. to sign with Dolphins after one-year stint with Ravens
Odell Beckham Jr. is flying south for the 2024 season.
nypost.com
Michael Cohen hasn't taken the stand in Trump's trial. But jurors are hearing his words
The second week of testimony in Donald Trump's hush money case will wrap up after jurors heard a recording of the Republican ex-president that's central to the case.
latimes.com
Defense chiefs from U.S., Australia, Japan and Philippines vow to deepen cooperation
Defense chiefs from Australia, Japan, the Philippines and the U.S. vow to deepen cooperation amid concerns over China’s South China Sea operations.
latimes.com
Former government employee charged with making false Jan. 6 accusations
Ex-government employee Miguel Zapata with tie is accused of sending fake FBI tips falsely accusing multiple coworkers of taking part in the Jan. 6, 2021, Capitol breach.
cbsnews.com
For international students, protesting on campuses has higher stakes
Students studying in the U.S. on visas run the risk of having them revoked, and potentially being forced to leave the country, if they’re suspended.
washingtonpost.com
Man arrested 30 years after companion's disappearance in Belgium
The woman — identified by the Brussels Times as Annie De Poortere — disappeared on November 12, 1994.
cbsnews.com
Shohei Ohtani and wife Mamiko mingle with Ed Sheeran at Dodgers gala
It was a star-studded date night Thursday for Shohei Ohtani and his wife, Mamiko.
nypost.com
Tiffany Haddish wanted to have sex with Henry Cavill — until she met him
"I used to really want Henry Cavill. I think he's so hot. But I met him and he was so awkward." — Tiffany Haddish
nypost.com
AI-fueled Ray Bans let you live stream and analyze the world around you
See into the future. Ray-Ban and Meta teamed up to unveil an artificially intelligent pair of sunglasses that can scan into the world around a person as they walk down a street, among many other bells and whistles. Although released last fall, the shades — which come in all sorts of colors and cost between...
nypost.com
Microsoft expanding biometric passkey access for more users
Microsoft users can now use biometric passkeys, like a thumbprint or Face ID, to sign into Microsoft 365, Copilot. Jon Fingas, senior editor at Techopedia, has more.
cbsnews.com
Biden Administration Says 100,000 New Migrants Expected to Enroll in ‘Obamacare’ Next Year
The move will allow thousands of people, known as “Dreamers,” to access tax breaks when they sign up for coverage after the Affordable Care Act's marketplace enrollment opens.
time.com
Why you should purchase long-term care insurance at 65 years old, according to experts
There are several reasons to purchase long-term care insurance at 65. Here's why experts say you should apply now.
cbsnews.com
What do tickets cost for the Knicks-Pacers NBA playoff series?
The high-stakes second round kicks off at MSG on Monday, May 6.
nypost.com
Crackdowns on campus protests over war in Gaza continue
There was another crackdown on a protest over the war in Gaza Thursday night as police cleared an occupied library at Oregon's Portland State University. New video shows damage and graffiti inside the building. According to the Associated Press, more than 2,000 people have been arrested at college protests across the U.S. since April 18. CBS News correspondent Jonathan Vigliotti has more.
cbsnews.com
This week on "Sunday Morning" (May 5)
A look at the features for this week's broadcast of the 2023 News & Documentary Emmy-winner for Outstanding Recorded News Program, hosted by Jane Pauley.
cbsnews.com
NYC man pleads guilty to selling exotic animal parts
Usher Weiss, 26, must pay a $5,000 fine and surrender all contraband.
cbsnews.com
Coastal life and ranches: A different side to Abu Dhabi
CNN's Bijan Hosseini explores the city's coasts, before getting up close and personal with a stallion.
edition.cnn.com
Weaving the future of South Africa's wool industry
South Africa is one of the biggest producers of wool in the world. Today, a visionary farmer turned businessman is working with a collective of artisans and fashion designers to maximize the potential of this natural fiber.
edition.cnn.com
Idaho suspect's lawyer: Prosecution has "withheld" audio of key video
Bryan Kohberger's attorney Anne Taylor said that prosecutors have not provided the full video that shows his car near the residence where four University of Idaho students were killed.
cbsnews.com
Can vegan mac and cheese beat the classic? We tried 6 boxes to find out.
Kraft, whose classic mac and cheese is beloved by kids, has a new plant-based version. How does it stack up against the vegan competition, and its original?
1 h
washingtonpost.com
Tesla retreat from EV charging leaves growth of U.S. network in doubt
Tesla’s retreat from EV charging is a blow for the whole U.S. network, which relied on Tesla superchargers.
1 h
washingtonpost.com
2024 Kentucky Derby picks, predictions: Exactas, trifectas, superfectas
You can make a legitimate case for 10 horses to be good enough to win this race on their day.
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nypost.com
Poetry Is an Act of Hope
This is an edition of the Books Briefing, our editors’ weekly guide to the best in books. Sign up for it here.Poetry is the art form that most expands my sense of what language can do. Today, so much daily English feels flat or distracted—politicians speak in clichés; friends are distracted in conversation by the tempting dinging of smartphones; TV dialogue and the sentences in books are frequently inelegant. This isn’t a disaster: Clichés endure because they convey ideas efficiently; not all small talk can be scintillating; a bad sentence here or there in a novel won’t necessarily condemn the whole work.First, here are four new stories from The Atlantic’s Books section: When your every decision feels torturous “Noon”: a poem by Li-Young Lee A prominent free-speech group is fighting for its life. The complicated ethics of rare-book collecting Poetry is different, however. We expect more from it. Not a single word should be misused, not a single syllable misplaced—and, as a result, studying language within the poetic form can be particularly rewarding. In March and April of this year, two of America’s great poetry critics, Helen Vendler and Marjorie Perloff, died. In reading Adam Kirsch’s tribute to both, I was struck by how different their respective approaches to language were. Vendler was a “traditionalist,” per Kirsch; she liked poets who “communicated intimate thoughts and emotions in beautiful, complex language.” She was a famous close reader, carefully picking over poems to draw out every sense of meaning. For Vendler, Kirsch writes, poetry made language “more meaningful.”Perloff wasn’t as interested in communicating meaning. Her favorite avant-garde poets used words in surprising and odd ways. As Kirsch writes, “At a time when television and advertising were making words smooth and empty, she argued that poets had a moral duty to resist by using language disruptively, forcing readers to sit up and pay attention.”I’d reckon that neither Perloff nor Vendler relished lines that were smooth and empty, even though their preferred artists and attitudes toward reading might have differed. Ben Lerner has said that poetry represents a desire to “do something with words that we can’t actually do.” In that sense, poems are a declaration of hope in language: Even if we can’t pull off something magnificent, we can at least try.Through poetry, we can perhaps come closest to capturing the events that feel so extreme as to exist beyond our capacity to describe them. In the February 8 issue of The New York Review of Books, Ann Lauterbach published a poem called “War Zone,” dedicated to Paul Auster, another literary great who died recently. The poem depicts not scenes of violence and gore but the hollow wordlessness many of us feel in the face of war or suffering—then it uses images of silence, blankness, and absence to fight against that unspeakability. The last line, which I won’t spoil here, points to this paradox: Words may not be able to capture everything—especially the worst things—but they can, and must, try. Illustration by The Atlantic. Sources: Alan Thomas; Lilian Kemp / Radcliffe College Archive / Harvard University. When Poetry Could Define a LifeBy Adam KirschThe close passing of the poetry critics Marjorie Perloff and Helen Vendler is a moment to recognize the end of an era.Read the full article.What to ReadThe Taste of Country Cooking, by Edna LewisLewis’s exemplary Southern cookbook is interspersed with essays on growing up in a farming community in Virginia; many of the recipes in the book unspool from these memories. Lewis, who worked as a chef in New York City as well as in North and South Carolina, writes with great sensual and emotional detail about growing up close to the land. Of springtime, she writes, “The quiet beauty in rebirth there was so enchanting it caused us to stand still in silence and absorb all we heard and saw. The palest liverwort, the elegant pink lady’s-slipper displayed against the velvety green path of moss leading endlessly through the woods.” Her book was ahead of its time in so many ways: It is a farm-to-table manifesto, a food memoir published decades before Ruth Reichl popularized the form, and an early, refined version of the cookbook-with-essays we’re now seeing from contemporary authors such as Eric Kim and Reem Assil. The recipes—ham biscuits, new cabbage with scallions, potted stuffed squab—are as alluring as the prose. — Marian BullFrom our list: eight cookbooks worth reading cover to coverOut Next Week
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theatlantic.com
The Surprising Animal Spreading One of Humanity’s Most Cursed Diseases
When Kathleen Walker-Meikle, a historian at the University of Basel, in Switzerland, ponders the Middle Ages, her mind tends to drift not to religious conquest or Viking raids, but to squirrels. Tawny-backed, white-bellied, tufted-eared red squirrels, to be exact. For hundreds of years, society’s elites stitched red-squirrel pelts into luxurious floor-length capes and made the animals pets, cradling them in their lap and commissioning gold collars festooned with pearls. Human lives were so intertwined with those of red squirrels that one of history’s most cursed diseases likely passed repeatedly between our species and theirs, according to new research that Walker-Meikle contributed to.Uncomfortable questions about medieval squirrels first came up about a decade ago, after another group of researchers stumbled upon three populations of red squirrels—one in Scotland, two on different English islands—with odd-looking features: swollen lips, warty noses, skin on their ears that had grown thick and crusty. A search for microbial DNA in some of those squirrels’ tissues revealed that they had leprosy. “What’s it doing in red squirrels?” John Spencer, a microbiologist at Colorado State University, recalled thinking at the time. Scientists had long thought that leprosy affected only humans, until the 1970s, when they began to find the bacterium that causes it in armadillos too, Daniel Romero-Alvarez, an infectious-disease ecologist and epidemiologist at Universidad Internacional SEK, in Ecuador, told me. But that was in the Americas; in Europe, dogma held that leprosy had essentially vanished by about the 16th century. The most plausible explanation for the pathogen’s presence in modern squirrels, Spencer told me, was that strains of it had been percolating in the rodents unnoticed for hundreds of years.Bacterial genomes extracted from several of the infected British squirrels suggested that this was the case: Those sequences bore a strong resemblance to others previously pulled out of medieval human remains. The next step was proving that medieval squirrels carried the bacterium too, Verena Schünemann, a paleogeneticist at the University of Zurich, in Switzerland, and one of the new study’s authors, told me. If those microbes were also genetically similar to ones found in medieval people, they’d show that leprosy had probably regularly jumped between rodents and humans.[Read: Tuberculosis got to South America through … seals?]Schünemann teamed up with Sarah Inskip, an archaeologist at the University of Leicester, in the U.K., and set out to find an archaeological site in Britain with both human and squirrel remains. They zeroed in on the medieval city of Winchester, once famous for its fur-obsessed market patrons, as well as a large leprosarium. After analyzing dozens of samples from around Winchester, the team was able to extract just four leprosy genomes—three from humans, one from the tiny foot bone of a squirrel. But those turned out to be enough. All four samples dated to about the High Middle Ages—the oldest detection so far of leprosy in a nonhuman animal, Inskip told me. The genomes also all budded from the same branch of the leprosy family tree, sharing enough genetic similarities that they strongly indicated that medieval humans and squirrels were swapping the disease-causing bugs, Schünemann told me.Still, Schünemann wasn’t sure exactly how that would have happened, given that transmitting a leprosy infection generally requires prolonged and close contact. So, hoping to fill in the blanks, she reached out to Walker-Meikle, who has extensively studied medieval pets.Walker-Meikle already had the exact type of evidence that Schünemann and her colleagues were looking for: medieval artwork depicting people cradling the animals, documents describing women taking them out for walks, financial accounts detailing purchases of flashy, rodent-size accessories and enclosures of the sort people today might buy for pet dogs, Walker-Meikle told me. Squirrels were so popular at the time that she found written references to the woes of a 13th-century archbishop who, despite years of pleading, couldn’t get the nuns in his district to stop doting on the creatures. They were essentially akin, she said, to tiny lapdogs. Fur processing, too, would have provided ample opportunity for spread. In the High and Late Middle Ages, squirrel fur was the most popular fur used to trim and line garments, and clothes made with it were considered as high fashion as a Prada bag now, Schünemann told me. In a single year in the 14th century, the English royal household purchased nearly 80,000 squirrel-belly skins. Contact between squirrels and humans was so intimate that, throughout much of the Middle Ages, leprosy likely ping-ponged back and forth between the two species, Inskip told me.[Read: Admit it, squirrels are just tree rats]But the team’s work doesn’t say anything about the origins of leprosy, which entered humans at least thousands of years ago. It also can’t prove whether leprosy infiltrated humans or red squirrels first. It does further dispel the notion that leprosy is a problem only for humans, Romero-Alvarez told me. Armadillos may have picked up leprosy from humans relatively recently, after Europeans imported the pathogen to South America. The scaly mammals are now “giving it back to humans,” Spencer told me, especially, it seems, in parts of South America and the southern United States, where some communities hunt and eat the animals or keep them as pets.Human-to-human transmission still accounts for the majority of leprosy spread, which remains uncommon overall. But Romero-Alvarez pointed out that the mere existence of the bacterium in another species, from which we and other creatures can catch it, makes the disease that much more difficult to control. “Everybody believes that leprosy is gone,” Claudio Guedes Salgado, an immunologist at Pará Federal University, in Brazil, told me. “But we have more leprosy than the world believes.” The barriers between species are porous. And once a pathogen crosses over, that jump is impossible to fully undo.
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theatlantic.com
The show trial of Donald Trump, Antifa returns, and more from Fox News Opinion
Read the latest from Fox News Opinion & watch videos from Sean Hannity, Raymond Arroyo & more.
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foxnews.com
U.S. labor market slows in April
The U.S. job market appears to have slowed last month. 175,000 jobs were added in April, falling short of expectations, while the unemployment rate came in at 3.9%. CBS News business analyst Jill Schlesinger has more.
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cbsnews.com
Base housing US military entered by Russian troops in Niger, defense official says
Russian military personnel have entered an air base in Niger that hosts U.S. troops following a decision to expel U.S. forces, according to a U.S. defense official.
1 h
foxnews.com
Knicks open as strong second-round favorites in NBA playoffs vs. Pacers
The Knicks are favored to advance in their series against the Pacers.
1 h
nypost.com
Israeli cease-fire proposal reportedly includes 40-day stop in fighting
Hamas says it will send a delegation to Egypt for further cease-fire talks and the group's political chief says they're studying Israel's cease-fire proposal in a "positive spirit." The proposal reportedly includes a 40-day stop in fighting. CBS News foreign correspondent Ramy Inocencio has more.
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cbsnews.com
China launches lunar probe to take samples from far side of the moon
China's advancing space exploration program has launched a new lunar probe to explore the far side of the moon. China has its own space station and conceptual plans for a moon base.
1 h
foxnews.com
China's Coast Guard Sails Near Neighbor's Front-Line Islands
Since a fatal accident involving Chinese fishermen, China has stepped up its coast guard activity in waters Taiwan considers restricted.
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newsweek.com
Columbia Law Review editors urge school to cancel finals after police raid left students 'highly emotional'
Editors at Columbia Law Review are requesting that Columbia Law School cancel exams for students following the NYPD removing anti-Israel protesters from campus.
1 h
foxnews.com
Kate Beckinsale says 'it's been a rough year' in first appearance since undisclosed medical issue
Kate Beckinsale opened up about her "rough year" while attending the inaugural King's Trust Gala in New York City on Thursday.
1 h
foxnews.com
Trump phone conversation with Michael Cohen played at "hush money" trial
A taped phone call between Donald Trump and his former attorney, Michael Cohen, was played at the former president's "hush money" trial Thursday. Cohen had secretly recorded the conversation where they spoke about an alleged payment to former Playboy model Karen McDougal. Attorney and CBS News campaign reporter Katrina Kaufman has more.
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cbsnews.com
Can Donald Trump Fire His Attorney Mid-Trial?
Trump has expressed frustration with attorney Todd Blanche amid his hush money payment trial, according to a recent report.
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newsweek.com
'Death to Israel,' 'Death to America' signs found on NYU property, NYPD says
New York Police Department officials on Friday shared photographs of anti-Israel materials handed out at New York University including the phrases "Death to America" and "Long Live the Intifada."
1 h
foxnews.com
Dunbar student grazed by stray bullet fired into D.C. school
The female student was conscious, police said, describing the injury as minor.
1 h
washingtonpost.com
Poultry enterprise to pay $4.8M after employing children to work with sharp knives
The owners and operators were ordered to pay $4.8 million in back wages and damages and to give up $1 million in profits.
1 h
abcnews.go.com
Mom Explains Why 5-Year-Old Eating First Chicken Nugget Is a Breakthrough
Emily Marie Losier was "incredibly proud" to see her son take a small bite.
1 h
newsweek.com
Small aircraft plows into sand during emergency landing on Long Island beach
Video footage shows the moment a single-engine Cessna makes an emergency landing on a beach in New York's Long Island on Wednesday after getting into engine trouble.
1 h
foxnews.com
Tiffany Haddish wanted to sleep with Henry Cavill — until she met the ‘awkward’ actor
The comedian playfully described the "Superman" star as a nerd, theorizing that he would "be more comfortable" talking about "Dungeons & Dragons."
1 h
nypost.com
Americans are more likely to oppose than support campus protests
But Americans — particularly on the right — don’t approve of many forms of protest in general.
1 h
washingtonpost.com
April jobs report misses expectations, signaling a possible slowdown
U.S. employers added 175,000 jobs in April.
1 h
abcnews.go.com
Patrick Beverley dismisses reporter who doesn’t subscribe to his podcast after ugly fan incident
Patrick Beverley told ESPN reporter Malinda Adams that she couldn't interview him because she wasn't subscribed to his podcast after Game 6 of the Pacers-Bucks first-round playoff series on Thursday.
1 h
nypost.com