American BMX racer Connor Fields out of ICU after suffering brain bleed in crash

  • Fields suffered brain bleed at Olympic venue, USA Cycling says
  • 2016 Olympic champion out of intensive care unit at hospital

American BMX racer Connor Fields suffered a brain bleed during a horror crash in Friday’s Olympic event but has been moved out of intensive care, his team confirmed on Saturday.

Fields went down hard in a first-corner crash during the semi-final runs and was treated by the side of the circuit before being rushed to Tokyo’s St Luke’s International Hospital.

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Coronavirus live: UK businesses warned over ‘no jab no job’ policies, Germany anti-lockdown protests banned

The leader of the Liberal Democrats, Sir Ed Davey, has said that plans to impose vaccine passports for domestic use was “unworkable, expensive and divisive”, as he called for the recall of parliament to debate changes to the NHS app which allows it to be used as proof of vaccine status.

Describing the plan as a “Covid ID card”, Davey said imposing vaccine passports would “be a real attack on people’s freedoms” and a “serious undermining of civil liberties.”

Because the government told us they weren’t going to do this.

We’ve all agreed that for international travel you’ll need to have Covid options but domestically, sort of Covid ID cards, the Liberal Democrats have led the campaign against them, we’ve seen MPs in other parties share our views that this would be a real attack on people’s freedoms and particularly hit businesses and young people - it is unworkable, it is expensive and it is divisive.

Frankly, this government has given everybody many reasons, time and time again not to trust them.

I do not trust Boris Johnson, I do not trust his ministers and we will watch them like hawks, and we will come down on them - that’s what we are doing now. They are trying to do this in the recess when parliament isn’t sitting - it is a disgrace.

Anti-lockdown protests planned to take place in Berlin, Germany, have been banned by the city’s administrative court, amid fears the Delta variant will lead to a rise in infections.

According to Deutsche Welle, judges at Berlin’s administrative court refused to authorise 13 demonstrations, banning tens of thousands of Germans from rallying in their capital city. Organisers of one protest said 22,500 people had registered to take part, according to DW.

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The knock that tears families apart: ‘They were at the door, telling me he had accessed indecent images of children’

Every month in the UK, hundreds of homes are visited by police officers dropping a bombshell: someone has been viewing images of child abuse. What happens to the families left behind?

It was an ordinary summer evening in 2016 for Emma when her ex-husband, Ben, dropped their young children back after a weekend visit at his place. The couple had been divorced for less than a year. Their split had brought with it the usual pain and sadness that comes when a long relationship ends, but things were amicable. He lived nearby in the town they had grown up in and saw the children almost daily.Emma was running a bath for the kids when she heard a knock on the door: “I thought he had forgotten something.” Instead, she was confronted by a female police officer, behind whom was her ex-husband, standing by his car, surrounded by plainclothes police.

“I immediately thought someone was dead,” Emma says. “The policewoman told me to settle the children in front of the TV and before she even had time to tell me what had happened, the senior officer came in, looked me in the eye and said: ‘I’m so sorry, life is never going to be the same again. The next few months are going to be hell.’ And then they told me they were arresting Ben for accessing indecent images of children. I felt like the world dropped away.”

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George the Poet: ‘Who would play me in the film of my life? Me’

The spoken word artist, poet and rapper on his love of Harry Potter, tendency to over-explain, and the worst thing anyone’s ever said to him

Born George Mpanga in London, George the Poet, 30, studied politics, psychology and sociology at the University of Cambridge. He hosts Have You Heard George’s Podcast? and has created a sonnet entitled Natural Poetry, for Samsung KX’s Wild Writing campaign. He is engaged and lives in London.

What is your greatest fear?
That I will run out of time to do whatever I was put here for.

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Body of Reuters Photographer Was Mutilated in Taliban Custody, Officials Say


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CDC: Emerging evidence shows Delta variant may cause mild COVID among vaccinated people



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A-level results: top universities expected to stick to rigid entry grades

Tough competition for sixth-formers as universities try to avoid overcrowding – and next year may be no better

For the first time in years, sixth-formers who don’t get the A-level grades they need in August are unlikely to be able to talk their way into top universities, experts are warning. They say elite institutions are facing unprecedented demand on space and a new era of much tougher competition for places is dawning, with fewer opportunities through clearing.

Many leading universities were forced to take thousands more students than they expected to last year after the government’s U-turn on A-level grades. This year, with grade inflation anticipated again, some top universities have made fewer offers. Experts say that when results come out on 10 August, admissions officers at the most prestigious universities will stick rigidly to offer grades so that resources including libraries, halls of residence and labs are not overwhelmed.

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Sky Brown ready to wow the world at 13 on skateboarding’s Olympic debut

The skateboarding phenomenon has bounced back from a horrendous fall and is set to be the star of the show in Tokyo

In May last year, Sky Brown, the young skateboarding phenom, almost died when she fell 15ft onto her head while transitioning between vert ramps at a skate park in California. The horrifying impact fractured the 12-year-old’s skull, broke her wrist and hand, and left her unconscious as she was airlifted to hospital.

Footage of the accident was uploaded to Brown’s popular YouTube channel and viewed millions of times. Lesser skaters would feel deeply uneasy about returning to the sport and repeating such tricks, but not Brown: she’s famed for being fearless.

Related: Skateboarder Sky Brown to become youngest British summer Olympian

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How Games Workshop grew to become more profitable than Google

Tabletop gaming, based on a mix of science fiction and fantasy worlds, has seen sales surge during lockdown

It started in a small flat in west London, with three friends selling board games and a fanzine via mail order; now Games Workshop is worth more than Marks & Spencer and Asos and is more profitable than Google.

This week the Nottingham-based company, which produces the Warhammer fantasy role-playing brand, announced all of its workers would get a £5,000 bonus after sales and profits surged during the pandemic.

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The shows must go on: the best of Edinburgh fringe, in person and online

From a play in a car park to an online event from a shed, this year’s festival is finding new ways to entertain

The Edinburgh festival fringe, at its height, was a magnificent monster. The largest arts festival in the world, it was exhilaratingly, dizzyingly, dauntingly huge and – like a city-consuming ooze from a 1950s B-movie – it kept growing, year after year. In 2019, the fringe featured more than 3,500 shows in over 300 venues. And that’s without taking into account its less chaotic sibling, the Edinburgh international festival.

Related: The Guide: Staying In – sign up for our home entertainment tips

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A newcomer rises in men’s trampoline.


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We Asked Daves About Dave, Marcus and Other First-Name Money Apps


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Novak Djokovic, with a 2021 Golden Slam ruled out, chases a singles bronze.


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Biden says 'in all probability' there will be new COVID-19 restrictions



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Republicans challenge Pelosi after Capitol Police are ordered to arrest those not complying with mask mandate



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China on 'high alert' as delta outbreak spreads to 5 provinces



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Pedro Francke: relief in Peru as moderate is made finance minister

President Pedro Castillo completes his cabinet after causing shockwaves with appointment of controversial Guido Bellido as prime minister

After 24 hours of uncertainty and the worst Friday in years on the stock exchange, Peru’s new president, Pedro Castillo, has completed his cabinet, swearing in the moderate leftist economist Pedro Francke as finance minister, and in the process calming jittery investors and anxious Peruvians alike.

Aníbal Torres was also sworn in, as justice minister, on Friday, filling the remaining empty cabinet posts. The rest were sworn in late on Thursday, amid deep unease over Castillo’s choice of prime minister, Guido Bellido, who is under investigation for allegedly defending the Shining Path, a Maoist rebel group that killed tens of thousands of Peruvians in the 1980s and 1990s, and is also accused of making homophobic remarks.

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Emma Wilson wins Olympic windsurfing bronze for Team GB

  • Lu Yunxiu takes gold ahead of Rio champion Charlene Picon
  • Wilson earns first female windsurfing medal for GB since 2008

Emma Wilson sealed a windsurfing bronze medal for Great Britain in Enoshima on Saturday, a quarter of a century after her mother came up agonisingly short in her final Olympic regatta.

Related: Team GB win triathlon relay as Jonny Brownlee ends jinx and finally gets gold

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Billie Eilish: ‘To always try to look good is such a loss of joy and freedom’

In an exclusive interview, Gen Z’s biggest pop star talks about body image, oversharing with fans and what she’s missed most since becoming famous

Billie Eilish is making me nervous. She has called, as arranged, bang on time – 11pm in Los Angeles – but, she admits, she is not quite ready to speak: “This is a mess, I’m so sorry!” Her pale face and platinum hair loom from her phone screen, surrounded by darkness. Her head is at a funny angle and… oh God, she’s driving, her mobile apparently balanced on the car’s dashboard.

Help! I don’t want to inadvertently cause the death of one of the world’s most gifted and valuable pop stars; to watch as a generation-defining musician at the top of her game crashes her car.

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Gender pension gap: how women can boost their retirement pot

Women on average retire with less than half the income of men. We talk to three women keen to buck the trend and give six top tips

Women are still facing retirement with substantially less saved in their pensions than men. Low pay is a major contributing factor to the gender pension gap as women often take part-time positions or become self-employed to manage family commitments.

On average, women earn about 16% less than men, according to the latest figures from the Office for National Statistics.

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Action station: walking the Cotswolds from our village base

Walkers are Welcome is a network of towns and villages that make excellent holiday hubs. Winchcombe, with ‘an appealing amount of Cotswoldiness’ is a perfect example

On a sunny day, on a hike in the Cotswold foothills, we stumble upon walking royalty. In the graveyard of Dumbleton’s Norman church, there he is: Patrick Leigh Fermor. A man who, in the 1930s, strode from Holland to the Bosphorus. Scanning his headstone’s Greek inscription in the oh-so-English countryside, we’re awed, humbled, envious. Though also aware that you don’t have to trek quite that far for a satisfying journey.

On our own five-day, car-free trip to Gloucestershire, my partner and I have walked almost 100 miles – and gotten nowhere. But we’ve found, among other things, a neolithic tomb, a wife of Henry VIII, a lot of birds and, now, a travel writing legend.

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Lab-grown dairy is the future of milk, researchers say

Startups are joining the race to create first imitation cow’s milk by artificially reproducing proteins in curds and whey

For decades, people on plant-based diets were restricted to soya-based options to recreate dairy, until veganism went mainstream and a clutch of palate-pleasing almond, coconut and oat-based alternatives emerged. Last week, Swedish scientists launched a potato milk, equally lauded for its sustainability credentials and criticised for deriving from a humdrum carbohydrate. The holy grail now – according to researchers – is genuine dairy milk, made in a lab.

A growing number of startups from Silicon Valley to Singapore are rapidly joining the race to create the first imitation cow’s milk, based on artificially reproducing the proteins in curds (casein) and whey, that is suitable for mass market consumption.

Scientists say it will recreate dairy’s authentic mouthfeel and temperature resistance, and constitute the perfect texture for vegan cheese, capable of melting just like the real thing.

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It’s Playtime: 9 Stylish Games for Grown-Ups



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GOP lawmaker says his colleague found an elaborate way to evade House mask fines



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Keir Starmer urges No 10 to bring forward Covid isolation end date

Labour leader calls for date on which fully vaccinated in England can avoid self-isolation to match that of Wales

Keir Starmer has challenged Downing Street to bring forward the date on which fully vaccinated people in England can avoid coronavirus isolation if they have been in contact with a person who has tested positive, in a move that would match a date of 7 August in Wales.

The call from the Labour leader – which adds to pressure from Conservative MPs – comes after the chancellor, Rishi Sunak, insisted on Thursday that the public had to “stick with” the 16 August date.

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‘How can a terrorist win gold?’: Korean criticises IOC over Iran shooting victory

  • Javad Foroughi is member of Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps
  • Campaign group calls for IOC investigation after ‘catastrophe’

The Korean marksman Jin Jong-oh has criticised the International Olympic Committee for allowing a member of Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps to compete and win a gold medal in the 10-metre air pistol event, saying: “How can a terrorist win first place? That’s the most absurd and ridiculous thing.”

In comments reported by the Korea Times, the six-times Olympic medallist added it was “pure nonsense” to allow Javad Foroughi to compete in the Tokyo Games given his membership in a militia of the IRGC, which was labelled a terrorist organisation by the US in 2019.

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Sunisa Lee caps her Hmong family’s incredible journey with Olympic gold

Simone Biles cheers on the 18-year-old daughter of refugees who fled Laos for US at end of Vietnam war

This was supposed to be the night that Simone Biles added yet another star-spangled page to the history books, by becoming the first gymnast to defend an women’s Olympic all-around title for more than 50 years. Instead a new American talent emerged from the shadow of greatness.

While Biles watched and whooped from the stands, 18-year-old Sunisa Lee held her nerve in an epic four-way tussle for gold. She had already made waves by becoming the first Hmong American to compete for Team US – and then again during a nerveless performance in Tuesday night’s team competition after Biles withdrew citing anxiety concerns. This, though, was a performance bursting with energy, boldness and power.

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‘Tough mental preparation’ key to Team GB’s hopes against Australia

Manager Hege Riise has sought to instil resilience while also looking after players’ wellbeing at the Olympics

Hege Riise spoke of the importance of managing the mental toll tournament football can take on players and described her whirlwind management of Team GB as a “privilege” as she readied her squad to face Australia in the quarter-finals of the Olympics.

The former Norway midfielder – who won Olympic gold in 2000, the World Cup in 1995 and the Euros in 1993 and was an assistant coach with the US women’s national team from 2009 to 2012 – joined the England setup as a temporary assistant coach alongside the Canada international Rhian Wilkinson in January. With Phil Neville parting ways with the Football Association to become manager of Inter Miami shortly afterwards, Riise stepped up as interim England manager and then the FA turned to her to lead Team GB in Japan with Wilkinson as her No 2.

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Hong Kong is having its strongest-ever Olympic showing. Back home, its fortunes haven’t been as bright.


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Hong Kong Protester Is Sentenced to 9 Years in First Security Law Case


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Why Elite Female Athletes Are Turning Away From Major Sponsors


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N.Y.’s Transit System Could Receive $10 Billion in Infrastructure Deal


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‘The Last Mercenary’ Review: Still Kicking


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Connor Fields, the defending BMX gold medalist, goes out in a crash.


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It’s All Fun and Games: 11 High-Design Lawn Games to Maximize Your Summer



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All Democrats should show respect for the 5 Republicans who helped on infrastructure



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Team GB claim Olympic double in BMX racing as Shriever gets gold and Whyte silver

  • Bethany Shriever holds off Colombian to win women’s final
  • Kye Whyte grabs Olympic silver moments earlier in men’s race

Great Britain’s Bethany Shriever and Kye Whyte pulled off a stunning medal double in the BMX racing on a stupendous morning for British cycling. Shriever won a dominant gold medal in the women’s race shortly after Whyte grabbed a silver medal in the men’s.

Related: Team GB win bronze in men’s eight as inquest starts into poor Olympic regatta

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Pedestrians get priority as UK unveils changes to Highway Code

Plans are part of £338m package to create ‘road user hierarchy’ and boost cycling and walking across Britain

Changes to the Highway Code, including putting pedestrians at the top of a new “road user hierarchy”, have been announced by the UK transport secretary.

The proposed changes, which are due to receive parliamentary approval in the autumn, will also give pedestrians priority at junctions as well as raising further awareness about the dangers of speeding.

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Women participate less at conferences, even if gender-balanced – study

Exclusive: small changes in conference design can make big difference to female inclusion, say researchers

Women are less likely to participate in proceedings at medical and scientific conferences, even with gender-balanced delegates, although simple interventions in conference design sparked a significant improvement in female inclusion, a study has found.

Medical and scientific conferences are imperative to the professional visibility of clinicians and academics, and researchers conducted this latest analysis based on data gleaned from the Society for Endocrinology’s annual national conferences.

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Hastily abandoned low-traffic schemes could cost councils funding

Transport minister warns local authorities not to remove cycle lanes or other reduction measures without evidence of their failure

Councils which rip out cycle lanes or low-traffic neighbourhoods before giving them a chance to work or without evidence they are failing could lose future central government funding, ministers have warned.

In a sign of the growing frustration within government at some councils, both Conservative and Labour, which have removed active travel schemes in the face of sometimes noisy objections, transport minister Chris Heaton-Harris is formally writing to the leaders of all English local authorities with transport responsibilities.

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Duncan Scott wins silver in 200m medley as China’s Wang Shun grabs Olympic gold

  • Briton makes late surge but cannot take Olympic title
  • Luke Greenbank wins bronze in 200m backstroke

Duncan Scott won Great Britain’s sixth swimming medal of the Games, and the fifth of his own Olympic career, when he finished second behind China’s Wang Shun in the 200m individual medley. It means Scott, 24, is now Britain’s most successful Olympic swimmer since the Edwardian era, and he still has two relay events to go. A few minutes before Scott’s final, his great friend Luke Greenbank won a bronze in the 200m breaststroke, behind Russia’s Evgenty Rylov, who set an Olympic record of 1min 53.27sec.

Related: Emma McKeon grabs gold as Australia enjoy more Olympic swimming success

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Team GB win bronze in men’s eight as inquest starts into poor Olympic regatta

  • New Zealand win gold in final rowing event of Games
  • ‘British team haven’t performed,’ says Sir Matthew Pinsent

Great Britain’s men’s eight produced a good performance to take bronze in the Olympic regatta’s final event as the inquest began over a disappointing medal return in Tokyo. The men’s eight were not considered to be realistic medal challengers but it proved a good display by Josh Bugajski, Jacob Dawson, Tom George, Mohamed Sbihi, Charles Elwes, Oliver Wynne-Griffith, James Rudkin and Tom Ford. They finished third behind the gold medallists from New Zealand, with Germany taking second.

It was Britain’s second medal of the regatta after a silver in the men’s quadruple sculls on Wednesday. The bronze medal ensured a positive end to a difficult Games for British Rowing. Earlier on Friday, Vicky Thornley agonisingly missed out on a medal in the women’s single sculls. It was Team GB’s fourth fourth-placed finish from six medal races at Sea Forest Waterway.

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Samsung Galaxy Book Pro 360 review: flexible laptop with beautiful OLED screen

Latest thin, light and adaptable Windows 10 machine looks great, is fast and has a nine-hour battery

Samsung’s latest Galaxy Book Pro is a fast and versatile Windows 10 laptop that has a gorgeous-looking OLED screen.

Available as a standard laptop costing from £1,099 ($999) or one with a screen that folds back on itself called the Galaxy Book Pro 360 for an extra £100 ($200). It is the successor to 2020’s Galaxy Book Flex and follows a similar theme: good 13.3in screen, 360-degree folding hinge and thin metal body available in a distinctive royal blue colour.

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‘A long-form pilgrimage’: Coventry hosts 24-hour interfaith celebration

The RSC and City of Culture’s free events include promenade performances and an installation by Tower of London poppy artist

In a celebration of one of the most religiously diverse cities in the UK, Coventry is to host 24 hours of art, theatre, music, food and debate aimed at exploring belief and promoting the connections between faiths.

The Royal Shakespeare Company and Coventry City of Culture have teamed up to produce Faith, a series of free live events in September, including four promenade performances and an art installation by the creator of the 2014 Tower of London poppy memorial.

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Democrats at odds over cancelling student debt



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No fairytale finish for Helen Glover after the mother of all comebacks

  • The 35-year-old and Polly Swann finish fourth in women’s pair
  • Two-time gold medallist Glover only made comeback in January

Usain Bolt redefined what’s possible by running the 100m in 9.69sec, Nadia Comaneci did it by scoring perfect 10s, Michael Phelps by winning eight gold medals at one Olympic Games. And at the Sea Forest Waterway on Thursday morning, British rower Helen Glover did it by finishing fourth in the women’s pair with her partner, Polly Swann. Fourth, of course, is the worst place to be, the one position no one wants to end up in, and it would be a lie to say Glover, who won gold at London 2012 and Rio 2016, dreamed of being there herself this time around. It wasn’t the fairytale finish. But then this wasn’t a fairytale story.

It was a story about what people can do, not what they can dream about doing. Glover, 35, has three children under five, the youngest of them a pair of twins who were born in January 2020. She only decided to try and make her comeback in January this year, a decision she’s described as “a lockdown project that’s gone too far”. There are people out there who might say that because they started making sourdough and ended up buying a breadmaker, and plenty more with kids the same sort of age as Glover’s who would consider anything more than making it through the News at 10 without falling asleep on the sofa to be ludicrously over-ambitious.

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German cycling director sent home over racial slur during Tokyo time trial

  • Patrick Moster told to leave over ‘camel riders’ comment
  • Rider Nikias Arndt ‘appalled’ by his coach’s language

The German Cycling Federation’s sporting director has been sent home from the Tokyo Olympics after a microphone caught him shouting a racial slur during the men’s time trial on Wednesday.

Patrick Moster was heard telling his rider Nikias Arndt: “Get the camel riders! Get the camel riders! Come on!” as he tried to catch rival cyclists from Algeria and Eritrea.

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Taekwondo pundit Lutalo Muhammad becomes BBC’s breakout Olympic star

Former Olympian’s calm presence and expertise wins praise from viewers of BBC’s Tokyo 2020 coverage

The BBC has faced a lot of criticism over its Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games coverage, but one element that seems to have only attracted praise has been the reassuring and calm presence of Lutalo Muhammad giving his expertise during the taekwondo events.

As well as his soothing voice, Muhammad has been happy to demonstrate some of his moves in the BBC’s virtual studio, while also noting that he’d have to be careful not to split his trousers while executing the high kicks, much to the amusement of his co-presenters.

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8.2-Magnitude Earthquake Off Alaska Prompts Tsunami Warning


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The Chinese Sports Machine’s Single Goal: The Most Golds, at Any Cost


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Does ‘The Da Vinci Code’ Writer Have a Secret?


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Who Decides What a Champion Should Wear?


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How to Celebrate the 200th Birthday of a Man Everyone Knows and No One Knows


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Pfizer impulsa el debate de las dosis de refuerzo contra la COVID-19 con un nuevo estudio


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StripTok: Where the Workers are V.I.P.s


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Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis mocks new CDC mask guidance and vows no more lockdowns



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Sinema Comes Out against $3.5 Trillion Partisan Spending Plan



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Google delays return to office, mandates vaccines



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'Here we go again': GOP not the only ones questioning updated CDC masking guidance



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Lack of quarantine at England’s borders ‘risks havoc of Covid variants’

Labour and medical experts question reliance on vaccination status and tests for arrivals from Europe, the US and elsewhere

Opening England’s borders to let millions of people arriving from the US and Europe avoid quarantine could risk importations of new Covid variants that might wreak havoc with unlocking domestic restrictions, ministers have been warned.

After the government announced plans to recognise vaccination status if people were fully jabbed in the US and most of Europe, Labour said it could make the country more susceptible to being overwhelmed by another Delta-like variant.

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CEOs told to ‘think before they tweet’ after Just Eat spat with Uber

Boss’s Twitter rant against Uber Eats risks backfiring, as experts warn online outbursts can damage companies’ reputation

Chief executives are being warned to “think twice before they tweet” after the boss of takeaway company Just Eat Takeaway was told his Twitter spat with Uber threatened to undermine the firm’s reputation.

Jitse Groen this week became the latest in a growing list of chief executives to be rebuked by customers, investors and even regulators over ill-judged tweets.

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Caeleb Dressel fills US swimming’s post-Phelps void with 100m freestyle gold

Caeleb Dressel tossed his medal to a teammate after winning the 4x100m freestyle relay earlier in the week. He’ll want to hold on to this one.

The figurehead of US men’s swimming won the first individual Olympic gold of his career in Tokyo on Thursday, setting a new Olympic record in the 100m freestyle.

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Revealed: £6bn NHS glove contract shows rocketing cost of PPE

Extraordinary sum reveals PPE cost pressures and raises fears of forced labour in overseas factories

The Department of Health and Social Care has set aside up to £6bn to spend on disposable gloves over the next two years, underlining the huge expense of continuing to supply the NHS with personal protective equipment.

The drive to secure PPE since the onset of the pandemic has led to rocketing prices, accusations of cronyism, and reports of forced labour being used to manufacture the products.

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Away from it all: island hopping around Finland’s Turku archipelago

With Finland now open to vaccinated travellers, the 20,000 pristine islands off its south-west coast make for an appealing post-pandemic tour

Finland has dealt with the pandemic much better than a lot of other countries. It still has one of the lowest rates of both confirmed cases (about 103,851 at time of writing) and coronavirus-related deaths (currently 982) in Europe, a feat many have attributed to a strategy of rapid lockdowns and stringent travel restrictions.

It did all this in typical Finnish style: without shouting about it. Perhaps this quiet demeanour is related to the country’s deep connection with the natural world, where shouting usually isn’t necessary. More than 90% of Finland is either forest or water, and the country’s jokamiehenoikeus (right to roam) gives anyone living in or visiting Finland access to all that nature, including a lot of privately owned land.

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When shame kills: why do so many mothers in Senegal feel forced to murder their babies?

Photographer Maroussia Mbaye spoke to women who said crushing social stigma, poverty and lack of traditional support systems had left them with no choice but to commit infanticide

Mbeubeuss is one of the biggest rubbish tips in Africa and Senegal’s largest open cemetery for murdered children. In the past three years, the bodies of 32 infants have been recovered from the site by the waste-pickers who work there.

Looking at the high rate of infanticide in Senegal, it seems the main reasons for it are shame about pregnancy outside marriage and a loss of traditional support for young women.

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The Sparks Brothers review – Edgar Wright’s giddy tribute to the Gilbert and George of pop

The fanboy director’s exhaustive doc follows Ron and Russell Mael over their 50-year career as pop’s great arch humorists

Over a whopping two hours and 20 minutes, film-maker Edgar Wright consummates a gigantic act of fanboy love for the glam art-pop duo Sparks, who hailed from California but found fame in Britain on Top of the Pops in the 1970s. Fronted by brothers Ron and Russell Mael, Sparks have continued recording and touring through good times and bad while amassing a fanatical following. Ron is the deadpan one at the piano with the Chaplin/Hitler moustache, and Russell the more extravagant and dishy lead singer.

Related: ‘We have a hostility to being boring’: Sparks, still flying in their 70s

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Rep. Stephanie Murphy says officers at the Capitol on Jan. 6 saved her life: 'Your actions had a profound impact on me'



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Multiple Republican Governors Reject CDC Mask Guidance Renewal



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Vaccinated people infected with delta variant might be contagious, CDC says in justifying mask guidance



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If GOP won't defend the Capitol, the Constitution or themselves, what do they stand for?



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Jan. 6 rioters told Capitol Police sergeant ‘You’re not even an American’



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Jan. 6 committee could be final hurrah for Cheney and Kinzinger



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What Do All of Your Favorite Summer Beverages Have in Common?



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Simone Biles pulls out of Olympics all-around gymnastics final to focus on mental health

  • Biles cited mental health concern in Tuesday’s withdrawal
  • No decision on her participation in individual finals

Simone Biles has withdrawn from the women’s all-around gymnastics final at the Tokyo Olympics on Thursday after a further medical evaluation determined that she is not yet ready to compete. The news followed her dramatic decision to stop competing in the women’s team event on Tuesday after only one rotation on the vault due to mental health issues.

However, a statement from US gymnastics left open the possibility that Biles, who could still compete in four more finals, may return for the individual events at the Games next week.

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Andy Murray’s Olympics at an end after GB doubles defeat to Croatian pair

  • Cilic/Dodig beat Murray/Salisbury 4-6 7-6 10-7
  • Murray previously stepped down from singles due to injury

Andy Murray and Joe Salisbury’s medal hopes were ended by a quarter-final loss to Croatians Marin Cilic and Ivan Dodig in the men’s doubles.

Related: Britain’s Liam Broady into third round at Olympics with biggest win of his career

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Ariarne Titmus assumes swimming crown after another Olympic gold for Australia

  • Australian breaks Olympic record in 200m freestyle final
  • Titmus times swim perfectly as Katie Ledecky finishes fifth

A new queen of the pool has been crowned. Twenty-year-old Australian prodigy Ariarne Titmus emphatically took the women’s swimming crown from American Katie Ledecky at the Tokyo Games on Wednesday. Having conquered the five-time Olympic gold medallist in the marquee women’s 400m freestyle on Monday, Titmus was again too fast in the 200m freestyle final.

The Tasmanian’s two victories in 48 hours – only the first and second time Ledecky has lost individual finals in her three Olympic outings – have seen her usurp the 24-year-old as the female swimmer to beat. Titmus can add to her medal haul in the days ahead; she will again face Ledecky in the women’s 800m freestyle, and the pair will likely face off during the women’s 4x200m freestyle relay.

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Team GB make best start to an Olympic Games in modern times

Four golds in four days plus further successes in the pool, gym, taekwondo, triathlon and dressage take overall medal tally to 13

Team GB have now made their greatest start to an Olympic Games in modern times after winning a fourth gold medal in four days in Tokyo. Further success in the pool, gym, taekwondo, triathlon and dressage on Tuesday pushed their tally to 13 overall – although fans were advised not to get carried away with thoughts of leaping beyond the 67 medals won at Rio 2016 quite yet.

The latest golden moment came in the form of swimmer Tom Dean winning the men’s 200m freestyle title after an epic battle with fellow Briton Duncan Scott, who claimed silver.

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Biden to announce vaccine requirement for US federal workers – report

Federal employees will be required to get Covid vaccine or submit to regular testing, according to CNN

Joe Biden says requiring all federal workers to get coronavirus vaccine is “under consideration” as the Delta variant surges.

Meanwhile, CNN has reported that the president will indeed announce a vaccine requirement for all federal employees and contractors, or submit to regular testing and mitigation requirements, according to a source the network said is close to the matter.

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Sunisa Lee and Jade Carey will represent the U.S. in the all-around with Simone Biles out.


By BY MAGGIE ASTOR AND CARLA CORREA from NYT Sports https://ift.tt/3rFQ80E

Workers’ Anxiety Grows as Covid Variant Casts a Shadow


By BY NOAM SCHEIBER from NYT Business https://ift.tt/3zJ619D

Will the Delta Variant Wreck the Recovery?


By BY NEIL IRWIN from NYT The Upshot https://ift.tt/2WopHRH

Spelling Bee Forum


By BY ISAAC ARONOW AND DOUG MENNELLA from NYT Crosswords & Games https://ift.tt/372IHau

The U.S. men’s basketball team dominates Iran.


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Cheney Warns U.S. Could Face Violence ‘Every Four Years’ if Those Responsible for Capitol Riot Not ‘Held Accountable’



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Border Patrol Released 50,000 Migrants into U.S. without Court Date: Report



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Republicans shred new CDC guidelines recommending vaccinated individuals wear masks indoors



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GOP doubters unswayed by Jan. 6 testimony



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Election updates: Jake Ellzey defeats Susan Wright in Texas congressional race



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‘I have a scene to do, run!’: backstage at Minack Theatre

Our photojournalist explores the famed outdoor venue in Cornwall as it welcomes back full houses

“I knew of it from pictures I’d seen online and I thought it looked pretty, but when you arrive and see it yourself, it’s like, ‘Oh wow, this is insane,’” says actor Guido Garcia Lueches about the Minack Theatre. “It’s probably the best theatre I’ve ever performed in.”

Carved largely by hand into a craggy, granite cliff-face, the dizzying outdoor venue on the south coast of Cornwall looks magnificent in the summer sunshine. Tiers of subtropical foliage splash colour throughout the landscape and weathered concrete seats bearing the titles of past shows rise abruptly from the stage. The ocean, 100ft below, looks an enticing shade of green.

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The U.S. women’s gymnastics team will have a clean slate in Tuesday’s final.


By BY JULIET MACUR from NYT Sports https://ift.tt/3754FJS

Michael Enzi, Long-Serving U.S. Senator From Wyoming, Dies at 77


By BY JACEY FORTIN from NYT U.S. https://ift.tt/3zCsbu8

An Olympic soccer roster is a fluid document.


By BY ANDREW DAS from NYT Sports https://ift.tt/3BKHCCw

Hong Kong Protester Is Convicted in First Trial Under Tough Security Law


By BY AUSTIN RAMZY from NYT World https://ift.tt/3l19qwc

Marking Olympic gold with a seven-dollar note.


By BY VICTOR MATHER from NYT Sports https://ift.tt/3iRpb6j

As Virus Cases Rise, Another Contagion Spreads Among the Vaccinated: Anger


By BY RONI CARYN RABIN from NYT Health https://ift.tt/3zCVigS

Latino Voters Moved Toward Republicans. Now Biden Wants Them Back.


By BY JENNIFER MEDINA AND LISA LERER from NYT U.S. https://ift.tt/3ybHr0S

Lo que no sabes sobre las alergias a los alimentos


By BY JANE E. BRODY from NYT en Español https://ift.tt/3eZkHJV

Spelling Bee Forum


By BY ISAAC ARONOW AND DOUG MENNELLA from NYT Crosswords & Games https://ift.tt/3zK1vYx

50 Years Ago, NASA Put a Car on the Moon


By BY REBECCA BOYLE from NYT Science https://ift.tt/2Wkvc3P

Olympics Covid update: Seven more test positive, including two athletes.


By BY SHASHANK BENGALI from NYT Sports https://ift.tt/373q8mM

Extreme drought pushes 2 major U.S. lakes to historic lows



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California will require state and healthcare workers to show proof of vaccination or regular negative tests



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Top female gymnasts eliminated at Tokyo Games by a technicality



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Why vaccinated America can't turn its back on unvaccinated America



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China accuses US of oppressing Beijing in high-level talks



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Football’s Olympic status is too much of a joke for it to remain in the Games | Jonathan Liew

Strange mix of development competition and star vehicle leaves public unsure of what it is watching

Nine years ago, I had a front-row seat at the Olympic Stadium in London for what would become known as Super Saturday. The ley lines of that evening are now firmly etched into the sporting lore of the UK: the triumphant last-lap surge of Jess Ennis, Mo Farah being physically roared over the line, that chirpy bloke who won the long jump. And yet my strongest and clearest memory of Super Saturday is none of these things.

It came about half an hour after Farah crossed the line, with the stadium still wreathed in a shimmering glow somewhere between heat and love. At which point, a member of the crowd shouted out to nobody in particular that 150 miles away in Cardiff, Team GB had just lost to South Korea on penalties in the quarter-finals of the men’s football. As the news filtered around, everybody – from the crowd to the press box to the journalist from L’Equipe sitting next to me – spontaneously burst into laughter.

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Team GB: Women’s hockey team hit back, Burgess misses canoeing bronze

  • Champions beat South Africa 4-1; men’s team also win
  • Mepstead, Britain’s only fencer, beaten in first round

Great Britain’s women’s hockey team got the defence of their title from Rio back on track after responding to an opening defeat by Germany with a 4-1 victory over South Africa.

The 2016 gold medallists fell behind to Nicole Walraven’s early goal, but Ellie Rayer inspired a concerted fightback. Rayer scored twice, while there were also goals for Laura Unsworth and Lily Owsley as Britain got their campaign off and running. Their next game is against India on Wednesday.

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‘We’re so proud of her’: Afghanistan’s gutsy female cyclists ready to cheer on Masomah Ali Zada

Watching an Afghan refugee in the Olympics is a source of inspiration to many women in a country where riding a bike is seen as a political statement and the Taliban are gaining ground

When Masomah Ali Zada makes her Olympic debut at the women’s cycling time trial this week, speeding her way around the 22km route with Mount Fuji in the background, it won’t just be her teammates in Japan cheering her on. In Kabul, where the 25-year-old joined the national squad as a teenager, a small but gutsy group of female cyclists will be glued to the television, willing her to do the best she can.

“I’m really, really proud of her and so are all of the team members, and we are really looking forward to watching her race and seeing her do great,” says Zahla Sarmat, assistant development director of the Afghan cycling federation’s women’s division. For her and her fellow riders, Ali Zada is a source of huge inspiration, even if her sporting success eventually led her to leave Afghanistan and claim asylum in France. She is competing in Tokyo as part of the Refugee Olympic Team.

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Sydney covid lockdown could last months as daily cases reach record high

More than 170 daily cases reported, with block of flats sealed off by police, outbreaks affecting two hospitals and further delays to Novavax vaccine

New South Wales reported a record high number of covid cases on Tuesday despite more than four weeks of lockdown for the Sydney region, with signs tough measures could extend until September.

“Vaccination is the key to our freedom. Getting jabs in arms is a key part of our strategy,” said state premier Gladys Berejiklian. “I want August to be the month where everyone comes forward to get the jab. That is key to us being able to see what September looks like. I don’t think anyone can deny that the vaccination rate is absolutely key to how we live life in NSW.”

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Peru’s new president to take charge of divided country ravaged by Covid

Pedro Castillo saw off an ugly, Trump-style revolt against his victory and must now try to unite the country

After nearly two months of waiting, amid baseless claims of fraud and even rumblings of a military coup, Pedro Castillo will on Wednesday become Peru’s president. The son of illiterate peasant farmers, Castillo’s rise to the top on Peru’s 200th anniversary of independence is hugely symbolic, but he will face huge challenges to unite the country.

Castillo’s razor-thin win has split the country between those who back his pledge to overhaul politics and the economic system to tackle poverty and inequality, and others who fear his presidency will upturn Peru’s market-friendly economy and even threaten its democracy.

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‘It’s just vital’: Edinburgh activists rally to protect Astley Ainslie’s green space

The grounds of the city’s 100-year-old convalescent hospital, under threat from development, are home to thousands of trees, some endangered

Fiona Brownlee and her grandchildren were among the first to sign up to help protect the rare and endangered trees that populate the grounds of Astley Ainslie, a century-old convalescence hospital in south Edinburgh being eyed up by housing developers.

Harry Brownlee, four, befriended a Lawson cypress; Carys, seven, a Holm oak; Ella, five, a white willow and Ava Strachan, eight, a horse chestnut. Fiona, a retired paediatric occupational therapist who started her training at Astley Ainslie in 1966, grabbed a Spanish chestnut. Her grandchildren, who live locally, play in the landscaped grounds of the hospital.

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Seabirds, lobsters and rock: a car-free trip to Bridlington, east Yorkshire

Seaside pleasures and foodie delights are on offer at this traditional resort – and there are superb gardens and wildlife to discover, too

The cliffs are alive with seabirds. Every rocky ledge is lined with gulls and guillemots. The air smells of fish and guano and is busy with flying birds, including huge gannets with nicotine-yellow heads and two-metre wingspans.

Among an unearthly cacophony of cries, like the soundtrack from a nature documentary, I can identify only kittiwakes – named for their distinctive call. The crumbling coast north of Bridlington, sea-carved into huge spires and caves, is home to half a million birds between March and October.

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I was an American in Cuba. Lift the embargo and let freedom ring.



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If all we have left to us is fleeting moments of joy we better make them good. Like these ones! | First Dog on the Moon

Everything is always bad so that is enough thanks no more news. No more sadness. Only snacks and fun

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Ending Bitter 3-Month Standoff, Samoa’s Leader Concedes Election Defeat


By BY NATASHA FROST from NYT World https://ift.tt/3kXqMu2

The U.S. and Japan, the best two softball teams in the world, will compete for gold on Tuesday.


By BY JAMES WAGNER from NYT Sports https://ift.tt/3eWKzpI

Rookie Bankers Sour on Wall Street’s Pitch of Big Pay and Long Hours


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Why Top Democrats Are Listening to Eric Adams Right Now


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Spelling Bee Forum


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How Katie Ledecky’s lead evaporated in the 400-meter freestyle final.


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One person fatally shot and two others injured in Belton Saturday morning, police say



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The Return of Bruce’s Beach: 100 years after it was stolen, a Black family may finally get its land back



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Duterte to deliver final speech to Congress amid crises



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'We have to get it right,' Dem vows as Jan. 6 probe begins



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California's largest fire burns homes as blazes scorch West



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Why it may be a 'grave mistake' for FDA to wait much longer for full COVID-19 vaccine approval



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91-year-old grandma is penalized by Idaho Legislature’s change to the circuit breaker



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A man found with guns and ammunition in his Chicago hotel room told police it was a 'mistake' and he 'didn't mean to startle anyone'



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A Republican official stood by the original vote count in Arizona's Maricopa County. Now he's being barred from the Cyber Ninjas' audit site.



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Covid case figures fall five days in row for first time since February

Decrease first without national lockdown but numbers do not include impact of lockdown easing on 19 July

The number of new Covid-19 cases in the UK has fallen for five days in a row for the first time since February, but this figure does not include the impact of 19 July restriction easing.

On Sunday the UK recorded 29,173 new cases, down from 48,161 logged on 18 July. It is the first time since the pandemic that a sustained drop has not coincided with a national lockdown. Most legal restrictions on social contact in England were lifted on 19 July.

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As US troops leave Afghanistan, what will future policy look like?

Joe Biden has said he will cut air support to Afghan forces and target terrorist groups from regional bases

As the US nears completion of its military withdrawal from Afghanistan, the Pentagon is supposed to switch to “over-the-horizon” counter-terrorist operations in the country. But it is far from clear yet what those will look like in practice.

The Biden administration has made it clear that after the end of August it will not provide air support for Afghan forces intended to bolster the Kabul government, though it is possible that will be reappraised if provincial capitals fall to the Taliban. However, Gen Kenneth McKenzie, head of the US Army Central Command, said on Sunday that the US would continue airstrikes in support of Afghan forces “in the coming weeks, if the Taliban continue their attacks”.

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Blue ticked off: the controversy over the MSC fish ‘ecolabel’

The MSC’s coveted blue tick is the world’s biggest, and some say best, fishery ecolabel. So why is it in the headlines – and does it really do what it says on the tin?

This month, two right whales in the Gulf of St Lawrence were found entangled in fishing gear. One, a female, was first spotted entangled off Cape Cod last year, but rescuers were not able to fully free her; the other, a male, is believed to have become entangled in the Gulf.

Hunted to near extinction before a partial whaling ban in 1935, North Atlantic right whales are once more critically endangered, with only 356 left. The main threat remains human contact: entanglement in fishing gear, and ship strikes. Fatal encounters, caused in part by the whales’ migratory shift into Canada’s snow crab grounds, have soared: more than a tenth of the population died or were seriously injured between 2017 and 2021, mostly in Canada and New England.

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Rhik Samadder tries … falconry: ‘Chicken wire stands between me and doom’

Eagles, falcons, vultures, owls – a close encounter with birds of prey is a riveting reminder of the gulf between them and us


The raptor spreads its wings with a piercing cry, talons stretching for me, alighting perfectly on my fist. “Beauty is nothing but the beginning of terror,” I whisper, quoting the poet Rilke. I’ve come to the Hawking Centre in Kent to try my hand at falconry because I think it might be very dignified. Something about soaring birds of prey inspires lofty thought. Unfortunately, I’ve been ruined by television: there’s another line running insistently through my head, from the Valentine’s Day episode of I’m Alan Partridge. “Do you like owls? I know a cracking owl sanctuary.”

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‘When disaster strikes, you have to help’: the volunteers in a global crisis

From Syrians helping in Germany’s floods to Russian CrossFitters fighting fires, ordinary people helping to tackle the climate crisis

When Anas Alakkad, a Saarland-based translator and paramedic from Damascus, saw pictures of the flooded German towns on his Facebook feed on Sunday night, he fired off messages to Syrian friends around Germany.

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To mask or not to mask? That shouldn’t be the question | John Harris

In shifting Covid risk to individuals in an already battered society, the British state has set the scene for countless futile conflicts

England has now entered the strangest phase to date of its Covid experience. Though the health secretary insisted, in a tweet he eventually deleted, that we must not “cower from” the virus, the contradiction between the lifting of restrictions and most epidemiological wisdom sits in the midst of our national life like a dull headache. The same prime minister who promised his ideological soulmates a new dawn of liberty is now embracing vaccine passports, and reportedly facing the prospect of defeat in the House of Commons. Meanwhile, references to “personal responsibility” have brought a new unease to everyday life, as the government reverts to type and does what Tory administrations usually do, transferring risk from the state to individuals.

Wearing a mask now feels a bit like putting on a badge. On what the rightwing press rather laughably called “freedom day”, I did some shopping at my local Asda, observed a masked-to-umasked ratio of about 70:30, and sensed – or thought I sensed – the crackle of judgment and mistrust, passing between those who were sticking with face coverings and those who had decided to go without. Two days later, I was in Stoke-on-Trent, where the ratio in a huge Tesco was more like 60:40 in favour of masking up. Despite announcements over the PA advising people to behave as if restrictions were still in place, the fact that some were sticking to the old rules while others were not felt like a matter of dull normality.

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The Fisherwomen, Chevron and the Leaking Pipe


By BY RUTH MACLEAN AND YAGAZIE EMEZI from NYT World https://ift.tt/3zM7rjR

¿Si te vacunaste debes volver a usar mascarillas? Cinco respuestas ante el auge de la variante delta


By BY TARA PARKER-POPE from NYT en Español https://ift.tt/3BCIIA3

‘We Could Not Find a Sign Pointing Us to Home Plate’s Former Home’


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MyKayla Skinner had a long road to the Olympics.


By BY CARLA CORREA from NYT Sports https://ift.tt/2Vccxa0

Simone Biles starts Olympics with floor exercise that isn’t up to her usual standards.


By BY JULIET MACUR from NYT Sports https://ift.tt/3BNYAzU

Exclusive: Jan. 6 select committee will include former CIA inspector general found to have retaliated against whistleblower



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Iran state news: Bandits kill 4 troops near Pakistan border



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Man in central China survives 3 days in flooded garage



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Boris Johnson talked out of triggering 'nuclear option' over Northern Ireland Brexit stalemate



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Las Vegas murder case cracked with smallest ever amount of DNA



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China floods: Henan mother dies after saving baby from mudslide



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California's largest fire torches homes as blazes lash West



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2 Turkish soldiers killed in north Syria



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Search for bodies concludes at Surfside condo collapse site



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First three of six new models now open in south Overland Park



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This Fort Worth man stood against the civil rights for which Opal Lee fought. He lost.



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‘A cartel shouldn’t get away with this.’ Anger at opioid settlements that exclude admission of wrongdoing

Multibillion-dollar settlements specifically exclude admission of wrongdoing over a crisis that has claimed 600,000 lives

There is growing anger among families bereaved by the US opioid epidemic at pharmaceutical companies “buying their way out of accountability” with multibillion-dollar settlements that specifically exclude any admission of wrongdoing.

Related: Enough fentanyl to kill San Francisco: the new wave of the opioid crisis sweeping California

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How England’s ‘pingdemic’ took a heavy toll on the Tories

It was billed as a return to freedom, but the week ended with empty supermarket shelves and cancelled trains as many thousand workers – including the PM and chancellor – self-isolated

Last weekend, as MPs prepared for their long summer holiday break from Westminster, a senior member of Boris Johnson’s cabinet had this to say about the Conservative government’s achievements in steering the country through the Covid-19 pandemic. “It seems incredible to me we are still ahead in the polls after the year we’ve had. I think that we have plenty to feel good about, don’t you?”

A week on, his choice of the word “incredible” seems to be the most apt. Within hours of making this assessment, and as freedom day approached, the health secretary for England, Sajid Javid, announced he had tested positive for Covid-19.

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Jeremy Farrar: ‘A September 2020 lockdown would have saved a lot of lives’

The Wellcome Trust director and Sage member on what politicians and scientists got right and wrong on Covid and why we need an immediate public inquiry

Jeremy Farrar is the director of the Wellcome Trust, a former professor of tropical medicine at the University of Oxford and a member of the Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencies (Sage). He has just published his account of the Covid crisis – Spike: The Virus v the People - in which he attacks the government for delaying a lockdown last autumn and describes the scientific and medical efforts that went into combating the pandemic.

At the beginning of the book, you say you initially believed that the virus might have leaked from a Chinese lab. Do you now reject that theory? And is there anything China could do to end that line of speculation?
You cannot absolutely, categorically, determine where the virus came from. But I do think that the balance of scientific evidence points strongly in favour of a natural origin, though you cannot totally rule out laboratory accidents. In order to do that, you’d have to find the intermediate animal host. And that could be one of thousands of different species of animals. It’s a needle in the haystack. What could China do? If it were to totally open up its laboratories, laboratory books and all its data… but I’m not even sure that would convince the doubters. But it would be great to have more transparency on all sides.

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Dina Asher-Smith: ‘You get 10 seconds to make your mark’

The fastest woman Britain has ever seen is also thoughtful, inspirational and willing to talk about things that athletes often avoid, like politics and periods. But in the countdown to the Tokyo Olympics, sprinter Dina Asher-Smith knows that every second counts

Around 9am local time, this coming Friday, Dina Asher-Smith will crouch on a starting line in Tokyo, ready for her first race of the Olympic Games. Nose this close to the ground, hugger-mugger with the other athletes, the moment will smell to her of skin cream and sweat, also the rubber of the track, a smell that might remind you or me of a playground’s springy surface, but which always makes Asher-Smith think of home. She has been a competitive sprinter since primary school. She started medalling in major 100m and 200m races about the time she was old enough to drive. Now, at 25, she is one of the fastest two or three women alive, and surely Britain’s best hope for athletics gold this summer.

On Friday morning, she’ll try to rid her mind of any such expectations. Crouched on the track she’ll place herself in an imaginary bubble, ignoring smells, impressions, sounds, even ready to ignore the echoing pop of the starter’s pistol. Wastes time, Asher-Smith has learned, listening for that. Better to try to feel the gun go and in the very same instant go herself. Ballerina focus will be required, next, to recreate a precise pattern of initial steps that she’ll have planned in advance with her coach. That ought to be the end of any conscious effort on her part. Over the next eight or nine seconds in a 100m race, or the next 20-something seconds in a 200m race, she says: “I shouldn’t really know what the sensations are. I shouldn’t be in a place to be reflective at all. I shouldn’t be feeling, only doing.”

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‘Our silence permits perpetrators to continue’: one woman’s fight to expose a father’s abuse

At 81, after years of suffering, Clare Devlin has joined the campaign to stop sex crime against children by revealing her own ordeal at the hands of her celebrated judge parent

Clare Devlin’s first memory of being sadistically and sexually snared by her father was when she was seven. But she knows that wasn’t the first time it had happened. She remembers a feeling of dread of something already known, a “recognition of feelings of fear and anger and grief”. The abuse continued throughout her childhood and adolescence until she finally found a way to stop the man who was the most powerful person in her universe.

Her father, Patrick Devlin, was one of the most celebrated judges in the country. Now Clare is 81 years old and, with her family’s support, she is going public about his behaviour, lending herself to the international movement to stop child sexual abuse. As well as telling her story to the Observer, she has also made a submission to the Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse, which finishes taking evidence in October.

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I Alone Can Fix It: Carol Leonnig and Philip Rucker on their Trump bestseller

The Washington Post reporters have unleashed a second startling story of incompetence and malevolence in the White House

History is written by the victors but Donald Trump being Donald Trump, he was never going to go quietly. So when the Washington Post reporters Carol Leonnig and Philip Rucker requested an interview about the final year of his presidency, Trump invited them to the palatial Florida estate he used to call his “winter White House”.

Related: ‘A madman with millions of followers’: what the new Trump books tell us

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Ash Barty knocked out of Tokyo Olympics in shock round-one loss

  • World No 1 falls to Spain’s Sorribes Tormo in straight sets
  • Barty’s Olympic hopes now rest on doubles tournament

Ash Barty has been knocked out of the Tokyo Olympics singles in the first round, upset by unheralded Spaniard Sara Sorribes Tormo in straight sets. In the biggest shock of the Games so far, 48th-ranked Sorribes Tormo beat the world No 1 and newly crowned Wimbledon champion 6-4, 6-3.

Related: Women’s relay team smash own world record for Australia’s first Tokyo 2020 Olympics gold

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Algerian judoka sent home from Olympics after refusing to compete against Israeli

  • ‘Palestinian cause is bigger than all of this,’ says Fethi Nourine
  • Athlete and his coach suspended by International Judo Federation

An Algerian judoka has been suspended and sent home after withdrawing from the Tokyo Olympics when his draw set him on course to compete against an Israeli.

Speaking before his suspension, Fethi Nourine, a competitor in the men’s under-73kg division, said that his political support for the Palestinian cause made it impossible for him to compete against Israeli Tohar Butbul, who he was due to meet in the second round.

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3x3 Basketball Is a New Sport, but It Already Has a G.O.A.T.


By BY ANDREW KEH from NYT Sports https://ift.tt/3zmQtrY

A Rebellion Is Stirring in Boris Johnson’s Backyard


By BY STEPHEN CASTLE from NYT World https://ift.tt/3kSn9Wm

This street skateboarder could deliver Japan’s first gold.


By BY JOHN BRANCH from NYT Sports https://ift.tt/3zsYxYc