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Fire at Georgia chemical plant releases chlorine into the air, authorities say

Rockdale County officials ordered people to evacuate the area near the BioLab plant in Conyers, Ga., and they said others should stay home to avoid the “harmful irritant chlorine.”
Read full article on: washingtonpost.com
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washingtonpost.com
Inside Putin’s Secret Personal Life and the Wild Lengths He Goes to Keep It Hidden
Alexander Kazakov/Pool/AFP via Getty ImagesVladimir Putin goes to “surreal” lengths to shroud his private life in mystery, but recent security failures have allowed journalists and activists unprecedented access to the secrets of his inner circle. A new report by the Dossier Center, a Russian opposition media group, revealed that the Russian president, his rumored romantic partner, and children are isolated in their residences, travel only by armored train, yacht or private jet, and require visitors to quarantine for two weeks.The Russian leader, who only broadcasts details from his personal life that support his purported Machismo, has long hidden key information about himself, especially about his family. He only acknowledges the existence of two daughters he had with his ex-wife who live under assumed names. Read more at The Daily Beast.
thedailybeast.com
Football Top 20: St. John’s handles business, Hayfield climbs into top five
The Cadets scored a big win over Friendship Collegiate while the new-look Hawks have won by an average of 60 points.
washingtonpost.com
Amazon Prime Big Deal Days: 17 pet products that are on sale early
Find considerable savings during Amazon Prime Big Deal Days on these pet products.
foxnews.com
New York City closes tunnel supplying half of its water for big $2B fix
The temporary shutdown of the Delaware Aqueduct in upstate New York has been in the works for years, with officials steadily boosting capacity from other parts of the city’s sprawling 19-reservoir system.
nypost.com
Israel launches small raids against Hezbollah across the Lebanese border, official says
Officials say Israel has launched small, precision raids across the border in Lebanon and that a larger ground operation is being planned.
latimes.com
Dave Grohl shops for Halloween decorations with daughter in first sighting since baby scandal
The Foo Fighters frontman was seen leaving a Spirit Halloween store with his 10-year-old daughter, Ophelia, in LA on Sunday.
nypost.com
An uninterrupted drive up California's Highway 1 won't be possible until 2025 — at the earliest
Driving up California's iconic Highway 1 near Lucia will require a detour through at least 2025 as repairs were recently delayed because of new landslide movement.
latimes.com
Michigan Democratic Senate hopeful warns Harris is falling behind in critical state: 'Underwater'
Rep. Elissa Slotkin reportedly told donors that Vice President Harris is losing support in Michigan, one of the most critical states to victory in 2024.
foxnews.com
Giants fire Farhan Zaidi, name Buster Posey new president of baseball ops
The 37-year-old former MVP joined the club's ownership group in September 2022, less than a year after his retirement in November 2021.
nypost.com
Newsom vetoes slew of bills over the weekend, bucks Dem legislature on progressive initiatives
Gov. Newsom vetoed multiple bills over the weekend, rejecting several progressive initiatives, including one bill aimed at expediting licenses for providers of transgender treatments.
foxnews.com
"Rust" armorer's conviction upheld in fatal on set shooting by Alec Baldwin
Hannah Gutierrez-Reed sought to dismiss her conviction or convene a new trial in the shooting death, alleging misconduct and suppression of evidence by law enforcement.
cbsnews.com
9/30: CBS Mornings Plus
Watch "CBS Mornings Plus," with co-hosts Tony Dokoupil and Adriana Diaz from 9-10 a.m. ET/PT weekdays on CBS-owned stations in Los Angeles, Chicago, San Francisco, Detroit and Miami, and is simulcast on CBS News 24/7, CBS News' national, free streaming news network.
cbsnews.com
NYC’s first-ever ‘garbage’ restaurant week is here: Michelin chefs making special dishes — out of trash
Zero waste doesn't mean zero taste, if you ask these top chefs.
nypost.com
Foo Fighters’ Dave Grohl spotted for the first time since cheating and baby scandal: photos
The skeletons are (still) coming out.
nypost.com
Liberal author urges Biden to ‘dissolve’ Supreme Court before leaving office: ‘It’s Trump’s harem’
"It’s so disgraceful, this court, that it shouldn’t even be allowed to be called the Supreme Court," she said.
nypost.com
Norway is mulling building a fence on its border with Russia, following Finland's example
Norway may put a fence along part or all of the 123-mile border it shares with Russia, a move inspired by a similar project in its Nordic neighbor Finland.
latimes.com
90 Day Fiancé’s Loren Brovarnik blasts troll body-shaming her ‘big’ toddlers
The Instagram hater warned the former reality star to "watch all of the junk food" before Shai, 4, Asher, 3, and Ariel, 2, became "chubby."
nypost.com
JD Vance has some explaining to do at Tuesday's debate
I thought I knew him back in 2016, but the man taking the debate stage against Gov. Tim Walz is unrecognizable.
latimes.com
Niecy Nash supports ‘Grotesquerie’ co-star Travis Kelce at Chiefs vs. Chargers game that Taylor Swift skipped
Nash, 54, and Kelce, 34, grew close while filming the Ryan Murphy series, with sources saying they "would not stop laughing" on set.
nypost.com
MLB scraps All-Star Game uniforms; players will once again wear team uniforms
After four years of annual Nike-designed All-Star uniforms, the league confirmed Monday it would scrap the special All-Star outfits.
latimes.com
Britain's last coal-fired electricity plant is closing, ending 142 years of coal power in the U.K.
The Ratcliffe-on-Soar station in central England is finishing its final shift at midnight after more than half a century of turning coal into power.
latimes.com
Experts reveal the exact time of day to eat dinner for better health
Digestion is best "when light is present and the body is active," one registered dietitian said.
nypost.com
I was devastated when my fiancé left me before our wedding — here’s how I got the ultimate revenge
This bride certainly wasn't feeling something blue.
nypost.com
I’m a 64-year-old grandmother with a much lower biological age — these are my hacks for looking young
Millionaire biohackers may have more money, but granny’s got the goods. 
nypost.com
McDonald’s location employed ‘modern slaves’ in human trafficking ring for years, overlooked warning signs: report
The victims’ employers overlooked a number of warning signs – like multiple employees having their pay sent to the same bank accounts or using the same home addresses, the report said.
nypost.com
No arrests in South Africa mass shootings as death toll rises to 18
One more person has died from mass shootings at two houses in a South African village over the weekend, bringing the death toll to 18.
latimes.com
Dead baby found in bathroom of Financial District eatery
The body of the child -- whose gender and age were not immediately known -- was discovered just before 10 a.m., cops and sources said. 
nypost.com
Hedge fund mogul Larry Robbins seeks overhaul at struggling CVS: report
Hedge fund mogul Larry Robbins will meet with executives at struggling drugstore chain CVS on Monday to present a turnaround plan that the Glenview Capital founder hopes will improve the firm’s operations, according to a report. Robbins, 55, made his name with a 2012 bet on health companies that he thought would benefit from Obamacare...
nypost.com
Lowe’s, Walmart and other retailers are helping with Helene recovery
The companies are committing millions of dollars, supplies and reinforcements to help the region dig out from the devastating hurricane.
washingtonpost.com
He shot two Jewish men last year. One victim doesn't think a 35-year sentence is long enough
A federal judge in Los Angeles cited Jaime Tran's mental health issues as his reason for not imposing the 40 years prosecutors had asked for.
latimes.com
I Expected Ellen DeGeneres’ Netflix Special to Be Rough. I Didn’t Expect This.
Her explanation for what happened on her daytime show invokes Ronald McDonald. It only gets worse from there.
slate.com
Family, friends mourn bus hijacking victim as alleged gunman is due in court
Anthony Rivera was shot multiple times while riding a Metro bus on his way home from a shift at Dodger Stadium as a parking lot attendant.
latimes.com
Trump Is Taking a Dark Turn
Over the weekend, the former president delivered a series of speeches laced with threats and nearly incomprehensible musings.
theatlantic.com
‘RHONY’ star Jessel Taank is transporting embryos from ‘Rodeo Dr. to Park Ave’ as she hopes for baby girl with husband Pavit 
"They're going from one shi-shi place to another shi-shi place," Taank tells Page Six's "Virtual Reali-Tea" podcast when talking about her "babies on ice."
nypost.com
Whacko former University of Kentucky staffer said Hurricane Helene was ‘act of God’ to punish Trump supporters
An unhinged former staff member at the University of Kentucky floated the idea that the death and destruction Hurricane Helene unleashed on red states was divine retribution for their residents' support of former President Trump.
nypost.com
Recruiter reveals the real reason ‘unrealistic’ Gen Zers keep getting fired
According to a report, 75 percent of American companies weren’t happy with their recent Gen Z hires, meaning anyone aged 27 or younger.
nypost.com
Ariana Grande sets the record straight about the cosmetic procedures she’s tried — and which she’s ‘open’ to
The "Side to Side" singer denied getting a nose job, boob job or BBL while admitting to getting Botox and fillers in a lie detector test with Vanity Fair.
nypost.com
NASA’s wild plan to grow mushroom houses on the moon
The space agency is betting big on fungus to build future habitats on the moon and Mars.
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nypost.com
Selena Gomez shows off her dance moves in sparkly, semi-sheer dress at Sabrina Carpenter concert with Benny Blanco
The "Emilia Pérez" actress showed off her curves in the plunging look that featured mesh panels along the skirt.
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nypost.com
What’s going on in Asheville? The devastating fallout from Hurricane Helene, explained.
Heavy rains from hurricane Helene caused record flooding and damage on September 28, 2024 in Asheville, North Carolina. Hurricane Helene made landfall in Florida’s Big Bend on Thursday night with winds up to 140 mph and storm surges that killed at least 42 people in several states. | Melissa Sue Gerrits/Getty Images The scenes from North Carolina are shocking: roads and bridges washed away. Houses ripped from their foundations. Entire towns reduced to mud and debris. On Thursday night, Hurricane Helene slammed Florida as a Category 4 storm with winds reaching 140 miles per hour. In coastal communities, Helene knocked down trees and power lines, and caused record storm surge. Yet some of its most devastating impacts were farther inland as the storm moved across the Southeast. Even before the bulk of the storm arrived in North Carolina, Helene started dumping rain in southern Appalachia — and loads of it. Over the last several days some regions in western North Carolina recorded more than 2.5 feet. Was able to talk to my husband in Asheville for the first time in over 24 hours today. He sent me this video of the River Arts District near our home. I’m so devastated. I’m so worried about the friends and colleagues who are missing. I’m so heartbroken for my city and all of WNC pic.twitter.com/1kCVvI2BP4— void (affectionate) (@ghosts_hmu) September 28, 2024 “We have biblical devastation through the county,” Ryan Cole, the assistant director of Buncombe County Emergency Services, said in a press briefing Saturday afternoon. “We’ve had biblical flooding here.”  Government officials have so far attributed 100 deaths to Helene across six states, including Florida, Georgia, and North Carolina. That number is almost certain to rise. Hundreds of people are still unaccounted for, in part because millions of households have lost power and there are still widespread cell outages. Many roads are also inaccessible, making rescue operations challenging.  Stunned by the devastation, some residents have compared flooding in parts of North Carolina to the impacts from Hurricane Katrina, which made landfall in Louisiana in 2005. Katrina claimed more than 1,800 lives. The weeks to come may indeed reveal Helene as one of the deadliest US hurricanes in recent history.  Helene is also a brutal reminder that climate change — which can intensify hurricanes and flooding — costs human lives. Record-warm water in the Gulf of Mexico supercharged the storm and filled it with moisture. Plus, hot air in general holds more water. These dynamics provided the fuel that enabled Helene to become a deadly, super-wet storm. And as Helene reveals, it’s not just coastal communities that are vulnerable. Asheville, North Carolina has been dubbed a climate haven — a refuge from the impacts of warming and its consequences. But in reality, few places are completely safe.  1) How bad is the damage?  After developing in the Caribbean early last week, Helene strengthened quickly into a Category 4 storm by late Thursday, when it slammed into the Big Bend region of Florida. That’s the area where the panhandle meets the peninsula. Helene broke storm surge records along Florida’s Gulf Coast, inundating coastal towns like Cedar Key with sand and seawater. It left homes in ruins. Much of the worst damage was farther inland, in mountain regions of Georgia, Tennessee, and especially North Carolina, all of which are far less familiar with the threat of tropical storms than the Florida coast. The main problem was abundant, unceasing rain, which caused rivers to balloon in populated areas like Asheville.  Videos and images over the weekend showed much of Asheville’s River Arts District — which hugs the French Broad River, southwest of downtown — inundated with water. State officials said all roads in western North Carolina, including parts of Interstate 40, were closed and should only be used by emergency vehicles. In nearby Tennessee, meanwhile, more than a dozen bridges are closed and five of them “are completely gone,” the state’s Department of Transportation said Sunday.  Power outages and water shortages are also rampant across the Southeast. As of late Monday morning, more than 2 million people were without electricity across South Carolina, Georgia, North Carolina, Florida, and Virginia, according to PowerOutage.us. Parts of western North Carolina are under a boil water advisory, due to a disruption in the public water supply. Emergency workers are planning to deliver bottled water.  In the last day or so water has receded in southern Appalachia, though the risk of landslides remains.  2) How much will the storm cost?  It will take weeks to get a full tally of all the damage, but Helene’s expansive swath of destruction has already put initial estimates in the billions of dollars. CoreLogic, an analytics firm, put its initial damage tally between $3 and $5 billion in insured losses. Moody’s Analytics expects a toll from $20 billion to $34 billion. AccuWeather is setting the price tag between $145 billion and $160 billion.   These are all coarse initial estimates, but they give an indication of the magnitude of the devastation. The higher projections would put Helene in the top tier of costliest storms in the US. Hurricane Katrina, currently the most expensive weather disaster in US history, extracted about $170 billion from the economy. Hurricane Harvey in 2017 wreaked $125 billion in havoc. The dollar value, however, doesn’t tell the whole story. Damage estimates are typically based on insurance claims, but with rising premiums across the country, more homes and businesses are going without financial protection. The insured value of a property doesn’t directly translate into suffering, either. A multi-million dollar coastal vacation home getting swept down a hillside will register as a higher loss on an insurance company’s balance sheet than a destroyed mobile home that’s the sole residence and store of wealth for a family.  3) Why was flooding in North Carolina so extreme?  For one, Helene was gigantic — stretching more than 400 miles wide — which means its impacts were felt far from the eye of the storm. Most hurricanes are around 300 miles in diameter. Plus, it traveled over an exceptionally hot Gulf of Mexico. Hurricanes are fueled by evaporating hot water that sends columns of moisture up into the storm, so the unusual heat in the Gulf only further charged the storm. Even before Helene made landfall in Florida, bans of moisture from the hurricane, which was churning in the Gulf, were pulled into Appalachia. Satellite imagery showed almost the entire East Coast shrouded in cloud cover. That means that some regions were already starting to flood even before the bulk of Helene arrived.  “Recent rainfall in these areas, especially the southern Appalachians, have left the grounds saturated and the river tributaries running high,” the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) warned last Wednesday. “Additional rainfall from Helene will exacerbate the existing flood risk.” This storm only added water to an already wet area. The areas surrounding Asheville are temperate rainforests, full of streams and rivers that run alongside human communities.  Though we’re still in the initial phase of the fallout, Hurricane Helene’s destruction underscores that the destruction from a storm is not simply a function of wind speed and rain totals. It’s also influenced by the amount of people and property in harm’s way and how ready they are to face a disaster head-on.  4) How does Helene compare to storms like Katrina and Harvey?  We know that Helene is already on course to join the ranks of the costliest storms in US history. What all those storms have in common is that they made landfall in the continental US at high intensities in populated areas: Harvey struck the Texas coast at Category 4 strength, Katrina rammed into Louisiana and Mississippi as a Category 3 storm, while Helene was a Category 4 when it hammered Florida’s Big Bend region. But the hurricane category ranking system is mainly based on wind speed, while the most dangerous element of these storms is the sheer quantity of water in the form of rainfall and storm surge. All three of these storms caused extensive flooding.   Their destruction also compounded on top of local vulnerabilities. Houston suffered intense flooding after Harvey because of the inordinate amount of rain it received, but also because the city is densely populated, relatively flat, and close to sea level. Sections of New Orleans sit below sea level and when Katrina struck, the city’s flood control infrastructure catastrophically failed. Helene landed in Florida’s Big Bend region, which is still recovering from the last major hurricane, before moving further inland and dumping rain on regions that have much less experience and infrastructure to cope with extraordinary volumes of water. A growing number of people are also living in areas most likely to get hammered by hurricanes, and these states are building more property and infrastructure to accommodate them. That means that when a storm does make landfall, it puts more people in danger and damages more homes, offices, roads, and power lines.      5) What is the government doing to help?  Before Helene made landfall, forecasters at NOAA put out a rare news release and blunt warning about the storm’s impending damage. The agency said that the hurricane would cause “catastrophic, life-threatening inland flooding.”  Evacuation orders were issued for parts of North Carolina, Tennessee, and Florida, but some residents didn’t obey them. The governors of Alabama, Florida, Georgia, North Carolina, and South Carolina heeded these alerts and submitted emergency declaration requests to the White House. Disaster declarations allow the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) to get involved in the response with emergency shelters, medical aid, and grants for helping people recover. More than 1,270 rescuers were sent to the afflicted areas. States also mobilized National Guard units to assist with rescue and relief efforts. President Joe Biden said he will visit afflicted communities once rescue efforts wind down.  Ad hoc networks of local volunteers have also sprung up to provide assistance and relief, even deploying private airplanes and helicopters to bring supplies to areas now isolated by floods and destroyed roads. 6) What did climate change have to do with it?  Though hurricanes are uncommon in many of the places where Helene tore through, a few have passed directly through inland regions like western North Carolina before.  Tracing out the specific role of climate change in Helene’s destruction will take some time, but there are now some established ways that rising temperatures amplify the harms from hurricanes. Hotter air and water make the strongest hurricanes stronger and fuel rapid intensification, where a storm’s winds pick up by 35 miles per hour or more in less than 24 hours.  Warmer air holds onto more moisture, which means that hurricanes dish out more rain. A hotter climate also makes the ice caps melt and causes the ocean itself to expand, lifting sea levels and expanding the reach of storm surges. Combined, these two factors create more flooding in the wake of a hurricane. Floods are often the deadliest and more destructive aspect of hurricanes.  Helene arose amid one of the hottest years on record, with ocean temperatures near record highs and atmospheric conditions suited for hurricane formation. NOAA anticipated that this year’s hurricane season would be above average.  And risks are mounting. According to the most recent National Climate Assessment, a US government report, the growing population in the region hit by Helene, particularly in cities, has created new vulnerabilities to warming. “Over the last few decades, economic growth in the Southeast has been concentrated in and around urban centers that depend on climate-sensitive infrastructure and regional connections to thrive,” according to the report.  7) How can I help? To find out where people need the most help, local news outlets have some of the most up-to-date reports of the situation on the ground and where help is needed. Begging people asking for where the news is on any situation to google the local newspaper for the area.@asheville is Asheville@theobserver is Charlotte @newsobserver is Raleigh@knoxnews is Knoxville Support local news pic.twitter.com/JvOBumo8kN— Kelcie Pegher (@klcpegher) September 29, 2024 Some state emergency responders have websites set up to collect donations for hurricane relief. Civic groups and food banks in affected communities are also collecting goods and money to help people who were hurt by the storm. You can donate to Helene disaster relief efforts at https://t.co/3nPyCAXftL. https://t.co/QDniaT6RYW— NC Emergency Management (@NCEmergency) September 30, 2024 Local emergency managers are also providing guidance for what resources they do and don’t need. Please take this to heart. The Tennessee Emergency Management Agency, for instance, specifically asks people not to self-deploy to disaster areas and to only donate things requested by local emergency coordinators.
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vox.com
Gloria Estefan on how $42 million commitment to end paralysis began
After surviving a 1990 bus crash that left her temporarily paralyzed, Gloria Estefan has donated over $42 million to paralysis research.
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cbsnews.com
Tony-winning Broadway star Gavin Creel dead at 48
Gavin Creel, the Tony Award-winning star of Broadway musicals such as “Hello, Dolly!” and “Hair,” died Monday in Manhattan, his partner confirmed. He was 48.
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nypost.com
How much are last-minute tickets to see Chappell Roan in Franklin, TN?
The "Femininomenon" singer will be at the Firstbank Amphitheater on Oct. 1.
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nypost.com
'Sunday Mornin' Comin' Down' and 9 other essential Kris Kristofferson songs
The influential country music singer and songwriter died Saturday at 88. Here are 10 of his essential songs.
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latimes.com
Entertain, inspire as a wedding officiant for your friends' and family members' most special day
When choosing the officiant for your big day, there are a lot of factors to keep in mind. The officiant has an enormous role in weddings, as the leader of the all-important ceremony.
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foxnews.com
Pentagon plans to shrink US 'footprint' in Iraq, but declines to say by how much
The Pentagon has finalized plans to wrap up the U.S.-led mission to fight ISIS by next year, with many U.S. troops leaving the bases they have occupied for much of the past two decades.
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foxnews.com
Giants rookie Malik Nabers ‘in good spirits’ after suffering concussion vs. Cowboys
One of Malik Nabers' fellow Giants receivers provided an update on the rookie after he suffered a concussion on Thursday.
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nypost.com