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Demi Moore totally nails Met Gala 2024 ‘Sleeping Beauties’ theme in stunning gown

The “Ghost” actress looked glamorous at tonight’s costume benefit, perfectly nailing this year’s theme.
Read full article on: pagesix.com
Singer-songwriter Huey Lewis on seeing his songs come to life on stage
Singer-songwriter Huey Lewis joins "CBS Mornings" to talk about his new Broadway musical, "The Heart of Rock and Roll," and working through hearing loss.
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cbsnews.com
Rangers’ Artemi Panarin couldn’t snap out of offensive malaise in time
By the time Artemi Panarin got on the board in this Eastern Conference Final, it was far too late to celebrate.
nypost.com
Donald Trump Issues Melania Update: 'Very Hard for Her'
"It's tougher, I think it's probably in many ways, it's tougher on my family than it is on me," Trump said.
newsweek.com
Shooting in Ohio street kills 1 man and wounds 26 other people, reports say
A shooting on a street in Akron, Ohio, killed one man and wounded 26 other people early Sunday morning
abcnews.go.com
Europe’s far right may be advancing, but its opponents are waking up
Even if the far right gains ground in the E.U. Parliament elections, it will lose.
washingtonpost.com
Ukraine Says 'Nine Russian Jets' Downed in a Month
Moscow has lost a total of 357 aircraft in the war with its neighbor, according to Kyiv's military.
newsweek.com
Aaron Rodgers, Sean Strickland have different reactions to Donald Trump’s UFC appearance
Two professional athletes had different reactions to former President Trump’s appearance at UFC 302 on Saturday night at the Prudential Center in Newark. Jets quarterback Aaron Rodgers — who had been considered to be a running mate for Robert F. Kennedy Jr. — didn’t look at Trump who nodded in his direction when he was...
nypost.com
Was my favorite teacher gay? Maybe a belly dancer could find out
I feel compelled to confess. That belly dancer in my 9th grade history class in 1982 at my L.A. magnet? I hired her. My bad.
latimes.com
As Los Angeles plans to take less water, environmentalists celebrate a win for Mono Lake
Los Angeles officials plan to take less water from the Mono Basin than the city is entitled to. Environmentalists say it will help Mono Lake.
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latimes.com
L.A. Influential is the story of Los Angeles in 2024
Los Angeles is in constant flux. Arranged into six categories, L.A. Influential presents people of all ages, backgrounds and fields, who are making a difference. Come back each Sunday for more stories on the moguls, artists, community leaders and others shaping the city now.
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latimes.com
The Supreme Court's all-important Jan. 6 decisions will be tainted
Would anyone reasonably question the impartiality of Justices Alito and Thomas? Without a doubt.
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latimes.com
Letters to the Editor: The economy is fine, but the Biden campaign's economic strategy is brain-dead
Voters care only about prices. Biden might as well be speaking another language when he tells them that the economy is improving.
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latimes.com
In HBO's rewarding new docuseries, a power struggle at a Texas Renaissance faire
Lance Oppenheim's 'Ren Faire,' premiering Sunday on HBO, depicts the mercurial king of the Texas Renaissance Festival and the fight to succeed him.
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latimes.com
Letters to the Editor: L.A.'s short-term rental law couldn't stop the party house in my neighborhood
A reader says L.A.'s short-term rental law didn't stop a party house in his quiet neighborhood from causing problems.
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latimes.com
D.C.-area forecast: Staying warm as shower chances return later today
Mostly dry early in the workweek before rain chances rise again.
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washingtonpost.com
Money Talk: Is it wise to have all your accounts under one roof?
A reader is setting up accounts post-divorce and wondering if it is "safe" or advisable to have accounts — IRAs, 401(k), cash management — with the same institution?
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latimes.com
For some incarcerated women, getting ahold of menstrual products is a nightmare
One of the things Alissa Moore remembers clearly from her time in prison is how the guards taunted her when she asked for a tampon.
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latimes.com
Extreme heat forecast for Western U.S. may kick off sweltering summer. Here's the outlook
A powerful high-pressure ridge will bring unusually hot temperatures to the Golden State by the middle of this week, before spreading into the Pacific Northwest.
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latimes.com
At center of Alito controversy, a flag celebrated by extremists
Since its origins in colonial times, historians say, the Appeal to Heaven flag has been used to justify political violence. It has been adopted in recent years by Christian nationalists and others on the far right.
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washingtonpost.com
How is climate change affecting heat waves in California and the West?
Extreme heat is becoming more frequent and more severe. Here's how much hotter it could get in California and the West.
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latimes.com
Has California underestimated the epic potential of future flooding? New research says yes
Researchers found evidence of two epic Southern California floods that occurred in the last 600 years and were much larger than the Great Flood of 1862.
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latimes.com
Letters to the Editor: Metro needs its own police force -- no more contracting with outside agencies
Contracting with multiple police agencies isn't working for Metro. The transit system needs its own security fully under its command.
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latimes.com
The Real Value of the Negro Leagues Can’t Be Captured in Statistics
In my major-league career, I hit 59 home runs. You can look it up; it’s right there in the record books. Baseball statistics offer a comforting solidity. They are concrete, tangible, and unchanging.Only the truth is, numbers drip with bias, like anything else. In baseball, many of them depend on the whims of an official scoring system. In August 1998, I hit a ball down the third-base line that ricocheted off the wall into foul territory. Dante Bichette, playing left field for the Colorado Rockies, overran and missed the ball as I circled the bases for an inside-the-park home run. The official scorer, though, ruled it a double and a two-base error. Bad play? Yes. Error? Debatable. The Phillies representative in the booth challenged the ruling, and the scorer agreed to change it. But by the time he tried to enter the correction, he’d missed the window to submit a change.So there I sit, with 59 home runs. I was never going to threaten Hank Aaron’s home-run record, but every homer counts. Despite baseball’s obsession with trying to get the numbers right, we know that the statistics are impossible to keep perfectly. And if there was ever a definitive counter to the old adage that “numbers never lie,” it’s how baseball has treated the Negro Leagues, which operated from 1920 to 1948. In 1969, baseball formed a research committee to consider which leagues of the past would be recognized, and selected six leagues going back to 1876. The Negro Leagues were not among them. Black baseball players literally did not count.[Read: How the Negro Leagues shaped modern baseball]But on Wednesday, Major League Baseball announced that it will finally add statistics from the Negro Leagues into its official record books, changing many of baseball’s long-standing records. The Hall of Fame catcher Josh Gibson, for example, has replaced Ty Cobb as the career batting champion. Some are hailing this change as a long-overdue honor for the Negro Leagues, but I think that gets it backwards. It’s Major League Baseball that’s honored by the inclusion of players such as Gibson.The change began, oddly enough, with COVID. In 2020, baseball entered a pandemic-shortened season of just 60 games, instead of the usual 162, into the record books. John Thorn, MLB’s official historian, told The Athletic that the 2020 season gave the game a chance to rethink what its numbers meant.One argument against including the Negro Leagues had long been that its seasons lasted only about 60 games. At one point during my career, I hit safely in 54 of 58 games, batting .364. If that had been my full season, I would likely have made a few leaderboards. Other players have posted even better numbers over a span of that length. But in 2020, baseball crowned a batting champion after just 60 games. If a season that short could enter the record books, why keep the Negro Leagues out?[Jemele Hill: What Caitlin Clark’s fans are missing]For a long time, the accomplishments of Negro Leaguers were dismissed as anecdotal. As clearer numbers were compiled, the records set by the players were ironically explained away as the result of not playing against all of the best talent. Black baseball players were nearly erased even though some of the greatest players of the time, like Babe Ruth, acknowledged their excellence. Baseball is now moving to fix that.And putting these statistics in represents justice in another way, too. During baseball’s steroid era, a number of players juiced their way into the record books. Baseball celebrated their achievements, which brought the fans back. Now a few of those “record holders” will be replaced or pushed down the list by players like Gibson. That represents a kind of poetic justice: The modern stats inflators who stood on the shoulders of the Negro Leaguers have now been pile-driven into the earth, as if the ghosts of the Negro Leaguers wanted to set the record straight from the grave.I remain a huge baseball fan, and I understand the passion for numbers in our game. But the real value of the Negro Leagues was never defined by statistics. The players were able to create a different sort of value, one that was not predicated on fitting into a society that saw them as inherently inferior. These players found a way to navigate the injustice of segregation, turning it into a means of self-empowerment. Once you discover that you do not need someone to validate you, especially someone who considers you less-than, the power shifts back to you. They had to build their own fan base, marketing plan, and business model. It was the original field of dreams.But these baseball pioneers had to try for more than “build it and they will come.” They also had to fight the “build it and they will steal it” or, worse, “build it and they will burn it to the ground” that hit everything—Black music, real estate, fashion. Black businesses were well aware that the financial equation was tilted away from them. Even so, they not only survived for decades; they developed incredible talents and skills in the process, both on and off the baseball field.The stories of many Negro Leaguers are examples of America at its finest (the leagues even included players from the Black international community). Some served our country, despite being relegated to the back of the bus. They endured because they saw how the future should be, not just the injustices of the present. Effa Manley, for example, a co-owner of the Newark Eagles, used her team to raise money to stop lynching. The players did not need half-baked equality to feel empowered and valued. Their communities were already providing that self-worth.So let’s see this update to the record books as a merger of equals, coming together for the good of baseball. Some numbers may have been lost or remain in question, but at least now we are counting everything that we can. And more important, we are counting everyone whom we long should have counted as worth more than the zero we tried to put on their backs.
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theatlantic.com
For Hunter Biden, a dramatic day with his brother’s widow led to charges
Six years ago, Hallie Biden threw out a gun that prosecutors say Hunter Biden bought improperly. His trial starts Monday.
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washingtonpost.com
Dems weigh local ties, anti-Trump fame in primary for Spanberger seat
Eugene Vindman, known for the first Trump impeachment, faces several well-connected local officials in Virginia’s 7th Congressional District Democratic primary.
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washingtonpost.com
NYT 'Connections' Hints June 2: Answers and Clues for Game #357
If Sunday's puzzle is proving a bit too tricky, Newsweek has some handy hints to help you out.
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newsweek.com
Slate Crossword: Namesake for the Boson Known as “the God Particle” (Five Letters)
Ready for some wordplay? Sharpen your skills with Slate’s puzzle for June 2, 2024.
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slate.com
Corral Fire in California burns 11K acres, forces evacuations
A wind-driven wildfire in Tracy, California, forced many residents to evacuate on Saturday as it grew past 11,000 acres. The cause of the fire is unclear.
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foxnews.com
As a Gay Man, I Always Thought I Had to “Pick a Side.” Then I Met Ana.
When I told my therapist about my secret fantasies, I never thought he'd suggest I do this.
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slate.com
Chinese spacecraft lands on moon’s far side to collect rocks in growing space rivalry with US
The emerging global power aims to put a person on the moon before 2030, which would make it the second nation after the United States to do so.
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nypost.com
This loss extra painful for close Rangers’ team: ‘like a family’
The team that ended every practice with a hug finished its season by watching the opposition embrace.
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nypost.com
Top Baby Names in Florida
Was your baby's name listed by the U.S. Social Security Administration as one of the top choices in Florida?
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newsweek.com
Map Shows Which States Have The Highest Rates of Firearm Deaths
Mississippi had the highest rate of gun deaths in the country in 2022, followed by Louisiana, Alabama, New Mexico, and Missouri.
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newsweek.com
Joseph Fiennes Says Cousin Is 'Embarrassed' About Cutting Off His Fingers
The British explorer famously sawed off his fingertips in 2000 after suffering severe frostbite during an expedition to the North Pole.
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newsweek.com
South Carolina Map Shows How State Could Be Underwater From Sea Level Rise
Sea levels rose about 7.1 inches in Charleston between 2010 and 2023—four times the rate of the previous 30 years.
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newsweek.com
Would You Buy Poop On the Internet?
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slate.com
Yankees’ Cody Poteet comes up big in place of injured Clarke Schmidt
Called up to replace the injured Clarke Schmidt, Cody Poteet delivered five solid innings Saturday night to help the Yankees beat the Giants 7-3.
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nypost.com
Ohio shooting leaves 1 dead, dozens more wounded: Police
One person is dead and at least 26 others are wounded following a mass shooting overnight in Akron, Ohio. No suspect has been taken into custody.
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foxnews.com
Police investigating fetus discovered on bus in Baltimore
A fetus was discovered on the seat of an MTA bus in Baltimore, Maryland, Saturday afternoon, according to officials. The incident remains under investigation.
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foxnews.com
7 of this week's most noteworthy health stories, in case you missed them
Before heading into a new week, check out some of the top recent stories in Health that you may have missed, or have been meaning to check out — here are 7 of the biggest recent stories.
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foxnews.com
Opinión: Los demócratas intentan limitar el daño político de la migración fronteriza
Los problemas fronterizos benefician al Partido Republicano y a Trump. Ellos están contentos de quedarse de brazos cruzados y decir que es un problema que Biden debe solucionar.
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latimes.com
'Wordle' Today #1,079, Clues, Hints and Answer for Sunday, June 2 Game
Newsweek has compiled some useful hints and tips to help you solve Sunday's "Wordle" challenge.
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newsweek.com
2 firefighters injured as wildfire spreads to 11,000 acres near San Francisco
The fire was burning in San Joaquin County, close to the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, which is about 50 miles outside San Francisco.
3 h
abcnews.go.com
Rangers can’t find winning combo despite slew of lineup changes
The Rangers didn’t lose to the Panthers due to some personnel and lineup calls, but it certainly became a factor in the end of their playoff run.
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nypost.com
Why New Yorkers Want to Leave
New Yorkers are keen to quit the Big Apple, according to new polling conducted for Newsweek, with many unhappy with the quality of life in the metropolis.
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newsweek.com
Upcoming Disney Films for 2024 and Beyond
From a live-action remake of "Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs" to a second "Moana" movie, Disney has exciting upcoming releases.
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newsweek.com
How Fast Food Became a Luxury
Neil Hershman, CEO of 16 Handles, told Newsweek that having to pay around $20 per meal is discouraging to customers who want something quick and easy.
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newsweek.com
Donald Trump's Abortion Problem
The former president has sought to avoid giving clear answers on how he would handle abortion issues if he wins back the White House.
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newsweek.com