Sunday’s World Cup final has been billed as a contest between soccer powerhouses, colonizer versus colonized, and soccer’s past against its future. But the matchup of Spain and Argentina also represent two sides of today’s polarized global politics on Israel. Under the leadership of President Javier Milei, Argentina has become one of Israel’s most steadfast... The post Israel didn’t play in this World Cup. It has dominated the games anyway. appeared first on The Forward.

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Sunday’s World Cup final has been billed as a contest between soccer powerhouses, colonizer versus colonized, and soccer’s past against its future. But the matchup of Spain and Argentina also represent two sides of today’s polarized global politics on Israel. Under the leadership of President Javier Milei, Argentina has become one of Israel’s most steadfast... The post Israel didn’t play in this World Cup. It has dominated the games anyway. appeared first on The Forward.

An autopsy released Thursday found that Ashley Hoath, the third of four inmates to die this year at Michigan’s only women’s prison, died by suicide after suffering acute aspirin poisoning.

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Bridge Michigan
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An autopsy released Thursday found that Ashley Hoath, the third of four inmates to die this year at Michigan’s only women’s prison, died by suicide after suffering acute aspirin poisoning.

“Miracle Road: The Story of Research Triangle Park” tells the story of North Carolina’s journey from “one of the poorest states in the nation (to) an economic powerhouse,” as described by Duke University Press. Written by father-son duo Mark and... The post Book detailing the history of the RTP to release October 2026, endorsed by former NC congressman appeared first on EdNC.

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EducationNC
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“Miracle Road: The Story of Research Triangle Park” tells the story of North Carolina’s journey from “one of the poorest states in the nation (to) an economic powerhouse,” as described by Duke University Press. Written by father-son duo Mark and... The post Book detailing the history of the RTP to release October 2026, endorsed by former NC congressman appeared first on EdNC.

El exentrenador del Real Madrid asumirá el cargo con la mirada en la Euro 2028.

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Mundiario
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El exentrenador del Real Madrid asumirá el cargo con la mirada en la Euro 2028.

မုံရွာအခြေစိုက် အနောက်မြောက်တိုင်းစစ်ဌာနချုပ်က လာတဲ့ ဂျိုင်ယိုကော်ပရာ ၃ စီးနဲ့ ဗုံးသုံးလုံးကြဲချခဲ့တာဟုဆို။

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မုံရွာအခြေစိုက် အနောက်မြောက်တိုင်းစစ်ဌာနချုပ်က လာတဲ့ ဂျိုင်ယိုကော်ပရာ ၃ စီးနဲ့ ဗုံးသုံးလုံးကြဲချခဲ့တာဟုဆို။

14 minutes

Chalkbeat
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This story was originally published on July 16 by The City Reporter. Sign up here to get the latest stories from The City Reporter delivered to you each morning.The City Council voted unanimously to approve a one-time $10,000 payment to most of the public school paraprofessionals on Thursday, an effort to boost retention and recruitment for the badly-needed – but low-paying – jobs with students. But Mayor Zohran Mamdani, who could try to stop the bill, said it is in “direct violation” of state labor law. The bill was sponsored by nearly every member of the Council, and passed 49 to 0, with two members absent. $244 million price tag“This is a mandate from the entire city of New York. This is a mandate because we heard the numbers — $32,000 starting salary, in the most expensive city in the world,” Councilmember Carmen de la Rosa, the bill’s lead sponsor, said at a press conference earlier in the day. “We know that we are in the throes of an affordability crisis, the way we can quell some of the issues of poverty is by putting money directly into people’s pockets,” De La Rosa said. “And this is what this bill does.”The “Respect” check, as it’s called, would give public school paraprofessionals $10,000 in four installments, starting on Jan. 1, 2027, and going through Aug. 1 of the same year. Substitute paraprofessionals would have their money pro-rated based on how many days they worked. The cost to the city would be around $244 million for payments to an estimated 26,000 paraprofessionals. The starting pay for paras is around $34,000, and rises to a top rate of more than $56,000 within 15 years, according to the United Federation of Teachers.Labor law conflict?Mamdani — who, as a candidate, supported an earlier version of the bill — expressed concerns as mayor over any payment made outside collective bargaining while also praising the work of paraprofessionals.“I have been clear that questions of compensation are best resolved through the collective bargaining process that respects workers and their unions,” he said in a statement after the vote. “However, the Council’s passage of this legislation is in direct violation of the Taylor Law. Our administration is reviewing the final language carefully and working to determine the appropriate next steps.”The mayor could veto the bill, but given the strong support in the Council they could then vote to override his veto. United Federation of Teachers President Michael Mulgrew said Thursday that the bill was written in a way to not run afoul of the state labor law. The bill, he said, is a last-ditch effort to help his workers.“We would prefer to do this through collective bargaining, but you need a willing partner on the other side,” Mulgrew said. Katie Honan covers New York City Hall for The City Reporter and is co-host of the FAQ NYC podcast.

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Chalkbeat
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This story was originally published on July 16 by The City Reporter. Sign up here to get the latest stories from The City Reporter delivered to you each morning.The City Council voted unanimously to approve a one-time $10,000 payment to most of the public school paraprofessionals on Thursday, an effort to boost retention and recruitment for the badly-needed – but low-paying – jobs with students. But Mayor Zohran Mamdani, who could try to stop the bill, said it is in “direct violation” of state labor law. The bill was sponsored by nearly every member of the Council, and passed 49 to 0, with two members absent. $244 million price tag“This is a mandate from the entire city of New York. This is a mandate because we heard the numbers — $32,000 starting salary, in the most expensive city in the world,” Councilmember Carmen de la Rosa, the bill’s lead sponsor, said at a press conference earlier in the day. “We know that we are in the throes of an affordability crisis, the way we can quell some of the issues of poverty is by putting money directly into people’s pockets,” De La Rosa said. “And this is what this bill does.”The “Respect” check, as it’s called, would give public school paraprofessionals $10,000 in four installments, starting on Jan. 1, 2027, and going through Aug. 1 of the same year. Substitute paraprofessionals would have their money pro-rated based on how many days they worked. The cost to the city would be around $244 million for payments to an estimated 26,000 paraprofessionals. The starting pay for paras is around $34,000, and rises to a top rate of more than $56,000 within 15 years, according to the United Federation of Teachers.Labor law conflict?Mamdani — who, as a candidate, supported an earlier version of the bill — expressed concerns as mayor over any payment made outside collective bargaining while also praising the work of paraprofessionals.“I have been clear that questions of compensation are best resolved through the collective bargaining process that respects workers and their unions,” he said in a statement after the vote. “However, the Council’s passage of this legislation is in direct violation of the Taylor Law. Our administration is reviewing the final language carefully and working to determine the appropriate next steps.”The mayor could veto the bill, but given the strong support in the Council they could then vote to override his veto. United Federation of Teachers President Michael Mulgrew said Thursday that the bill was written in a way to not run afoul of the state labor law. The bill, he said, is a last-ditch effort to help his workers.“We would prefer to do this through collective bargaining, but you need a willing partner on the other side,” Mulgrew said. Katie Honan covers New York City Hall for The City Reporter and is co-host of the FAQ NYC podcast.

Bailey is far behind his 2022 fundraising pace.

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Capitol News Illinois
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Bailey is far behind his 2022 fundraising pace.

A federal judge questioned whether the Trump administration is complying with a court order requiring continued funding for legal representation of unaccompanied migrant children, as Estrella del Paso says it's owed more than $765,000 in reimbursements. The post Judge questions Trump administration’s compliance with order to fund legal aid for migrant children appeared first on El Paso Matters.

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El Paso Matters
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A federal judge questioned whether the Trump administration is complying with a court order requiring continued funding for legal representation of unaccompanied migrant children, as Estrella del Paso says it's owed more than $765,000 in reimbursements. The post Judge questions Trump administration’s compliance with order to fund legal aid for migrant children appeared first on El Paso Matters.

15 minutes

Outras Palavras
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Maior superfície alagável do mundo agoniza. Vive seca severa. Vegetação dá lugar a pastos e incêndios do agro assolam o bioma. Perdeu 30% de sua área e pode desaparecer em 50 anos. Tarefa para outubro: construir a Bancada da Biodiversidade The post No Pantanal, alerta para o ecocídio appeared first on Outras Palavras.

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Outras Palavras
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Maior superfície alagável do mundo agoniza. Vive seca severa. Vegetação dá lugar a pastos e incêndios do agro assolam o bioma. Perdeu 30% de sua área e pode desaparecer em 50 anos. Tarefa para outubro: construir a Bancada da Biodiversidade The post No Pantanal, alerta para o ecocídio appeared first on Outras Palavras.

(The Center Square) – California is suing five cities that the state says failed to comply with the Housing Element Law. The cities are Calexico, Costa Mesa, Half Moon Bay, Ridgecrest and Turlock. Enacted in 1969, California’s Housing Element Law requires every city and county to adequately plan to meet the housing needs of all residents. Instead of forcing local governments to build houses directly, the state law requires governments to update zoning and land-use policies so the private market can build enough housing to meet demand. “I've said before, and I'll say it again, we are in a state of emergency in California when it comes to housing production,” state Attorney General Rob Bonta said Thursday at a press conference in San Francisco. “We need to build more housing immediately, and no single local jurisdiction, no city, no county is responsible for building all of the housing that we need in California. But every city, every county is responsible for building some of the housing that we need.” The actions taken by Bonta are part of a coordinated effort by Gov. Gavin Newsom and the state Department of Housing and Community Development. Ninety-five percent of California’s 540 jurisdictions are in compliance, said Bonta, who called the five cities “outliers” and “scofflaws.” HCD Director Gustavo Velasquez was at the press conference with the Democratic attorney general. "This isn't about making them build. It’s about planning” and ensuring that land is available to plan for the “adequate amount of housing” that residents and workers need, Velasquez said. "When local jurisdictions aren't willing to step up, the consequences of our housing and homelessness crisis don't end at city lines," Velasquez told reporters. "They ripple across every region in our state." Bonta said the five cities were provided multiple opportunities to comply before enforcement. For example, HCD issued notices of violation and written findings and allowed each jurisdiction 30 days to submit a written response. Two meetings were also offered to discuss the violations and potential solutions. Bonta added that four other cities - Atwater, Grand Terrace, Oakdale and Escalon – have come into compliance after being reached by state officials and agencies. “They will come into compliance in August, and I just want to point that out because if you are committed to coming into compliance, you can come into compliance,” said Bonta. “If you are dedicated, if you work with us, and Atwater, Grand Terrace, Oakdale, and Escalon have taken a different path, the appropriate path that the five cities we are suing today elected not to take by not coming into compliance at this time with housing laws.” Newsom was not at Thursday’s press conference. However, the Democratic governor issued a press release saying that Calexico, Costa Mesa, Half Moon Bay, Ridgecrest and Turlock “had every chance to follow the law and plan” for their fair share of housing. “They chose not to, so now they’ll answer for it in court,” said Newsom. “Housing law applies statewide, and no city gets a pass.” The five cities are spread out across California. Calexico and Costa Mesa are in southern portions of the state. Half Moon Bay is near San Francisco. Ridgecrest is about 150 miles northeast of Los Angeles. Turlock is in the state's Central Valley. There was another development Thursday as Bonta and California Energy Commission Chair David Hochschild sent a Notice of Intent to Sue targeting “an unlawful agreement between the U.S. Department of Interior (DOI) and Invenergy.” The attorney general’s office said the agreement would “thwart California’s offshore wind energy development.”

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The Center Square
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(The Center Square) – California is suing five cities that the state says failed to comply with the Housing Element Law. The cities are Calexico, Costa Mesa, Half Moon Bay, Ridgecrest and Turlock. Enacted in 1969, California’s Housing Element Law requires every city and county to adequately plan to meet the housing needs of all residents. Instead of forcing local governments to build houses directly, the state law requires governments to update zoning and land-use policies so the private market can build enough housing to meet demand. “I've said before, and I'll say it again, we are in a state of emergency in California when it comes to housing production,” state Attorney General Rob Bonta said Thursday at a press conference in San Francisco. “We need to build more housing immediately, and no single local jurisdiction, no city, no county is responsible for building all of the housing that we need in California. But every city, every county is responsible for building some of the housing that we need.” The actions taken by Bonta are part of a coordinated effort by Gov. Gavin Newsom and the state Department of Housing and Community Development. Ninety-five percent of California’s 540 jurisdictions are in compliance, said Bonta, who called the five cities “outliers” and “scofflaws.” HCD Director Gustavo Velasquez was at the press conference with the Democratic attorney general. "This isn't about making them build. It’s about planning” and ensuring that land is available to plan for the “adequate amount of housing” that residents and workers need, Velasquez said. "When local jurisdictions aren't willing to step up, the consequences of our housing and homelessness crisis don't end at city lines," Velasquez told reporters. "They ripple across every region in our state." Bonta said the five cities were provided multiple opportunities to comply before enforcement. For example, HCD issued notices of violation and written findings and allowed each jurisdiction 30 days to submit a written response. Two meetings were also offered to discuss the violations and potential solutions. Bonta added that four other cities - Atwater, Grand Terrace, Oakdale and Escalon – have come into compliance after being reached by state officials and agencies. “They will come into compliance in August, and I just want to point that out because if you are committed to coming into compliance, you can come into compliance,” said Bonta. “If you are dedicated, if you work with us, and Atwater, Grand Terrace, Oakdale, and Escalon have taken a different path, the appropriate path that the five cities we are suing today elected not to take by not coming into compliance at this time with housing laws.” Newsom was not at Thursday’s press conference. However, the Democratic governor issued a press release saying that Calexico, Costa Mesa, Half Moon Bay, Ridgecrest and Turlock “had every chance to follow the law and plan” for their fair share of housing. “They chose not to, so now they’ll answer for it in court,” said Newsom. “Housing law applies statewide, and no city gets a pass.” The five cities are spread out across California. Calexico and Costa Mesa are in southern portions of the state. Half Moon Bay is near San Francisco. Ridgecrest is about 150 miles northeast of Los Angeles. Turlock is in the state's Central Valley. There was another development Thursday as Bonta and California Energy Commission Chair David Hochschild sent a Notice of Intent to Sue targeting “an unlawful agreement between the U.S. Department of Interior (DOI) and Invenergy.” The attorney general’s office said the agreement would “thwart California’s offshore wind energy development.”

17 minutes

Santa Barbara News Press
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The two-story medical center, located at 6975 Santa Felicia Drive, will be reviewed by Goleta's Design Review Board on July 28 The post A new medical clinic is making its way to Goleta appeared first on Santa Barbara News-Press.

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Santa Barbara News Press
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The two-story medical center, located at 6975 Santa Felicia Drive, will be reviewed by Goleta's Design Review Board on July 28 The post A new medical clinic is making its way to Goleta appeared first on Santa Barbara News-Press.

VK said on July 16 that the Max messenger and the VKontakte social network apps had been removed from the Google Play app store. The Odnoklassniki social network app is also unavailable there.

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Meduza
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VK said on July 16 that the Max messenger and the VKontakte social network apps had been removed from the Google Play app store. The Odnoklassniki social network app is also unavailable there.

More than a year after it was due, the state’s plan to provide treatment for Oklahoma defendants was approved by consultants overseeing a high-profile consent decree.

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KOSU
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More than a year after it was due, the state’s plan to provide treatment for Oklahoma defendants was approved by consultants overseeing a high-profile consent decree.

An 80-year-old man died at a gas station in Lysva, a city in Perm Krai, the local newspaper Iskra reported. He had fallen ill while waiting in line to fill up his car. Bystanders called an ambulance, but paramedics could not save him.

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Meduza
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An 80-year-old man died at a gas station in Lysva, a city in Perm Krai, the local newspaper Iskra reported. He had fallen ill while waiting in line to fill up his car. Bystanders called an ambulance, but paramedics could not save him.

رسانه‌های جمهوری اسلامی بامداد جمعه ۲۶ تیر از تداوم حملات آمریکا به مواضعی در نوار جنوبی ایران خبر دادند و اعلام کردند در یکی از این حملات «پل محور کهورستان» و در حمله‌ای دیگر ایستگاه انشعاب راه آهن بندرعباس هدف قرار گرفته است.

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صدای آمریکا
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رسانه‌های جمهوری اسلامی بامداد جمعه ۲۶ تیر از تداوم حملات آمریکا به مواضعی در نوار جنوبی ایران خبر دادند و اعلام کردند در یکی از این حملات «پل محور کهورستان» و در حمله‌ای دیگر ایستگاه انشعاب راه آهن بندرعباس هدف قرار گرفته است.

#TBT: July 16, 2026
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21 minutes

Pasquines
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Born April 16, 1866, José de Diego y Martínez was a Puerto Rican statesman, journalist, poet, lawyer, and advocate for Puerto Rico’s political autonomy in union with Spain and later for independence from the United States. He passed away on July 16, 1918. The post #TBT: July 16, 2026 appeared first on Pasquines.

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Pasquines
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Born April 16, 1866, José de Diego y Martínez was a Puerto Rican statesman, journalist, poet, lawyer, and advocate for Puerto Rico’s political autonomy in union with Spain and later for independence from the United States. He passed away on July 16, 1918. The post #TBT: July 16, 2026 appeared first on Pasquines.

23 minutes

美国之音
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2026年7月17日《VOA今日焦点》重点新闻内容包括:美军空袭伊朗指挥中心 中东局势升温牵动全球油价 ;白宫:特朗普总统全国讲话聚焦选举、伊朗、经济 ;卢比奥吁国际社会积极应对极左翼恐怖主义威胁 ;美国国土安全部将修改外国学生和记者签证规定 ;美国会警告中国“军民融合”战略 ;北大高材生成“芬太尼毒王”? 美联邦法院开审 ;巴布亚新几内亚宣布关闭台湾驻巴新代表处; 世界杯决赛对战组合出炉 几家欢乐几家愁

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美国之音
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2026年7月17日《VOA今日焦点》重点新闻内容包括:美军空袭伊朗指挥中心 中东局势升温牵动全球油价 ;白宫:特朗普总统全国讲话聚焦选举、伊朗、经济 ;卢比奥吁国际社会积极应对极左翼恐怖主义威胁 ;美国国土安全部将修改外国学生和记者签证规定 ;美国会警告中国“军民融合”战略 ;北大高材生成“芬太尼毒王”? 美联邦法院开审 ;巴布亚新几内亚宣布关闭台湾驻巴新代表处; 世界杯决赛对战组合出炉 几家欢乐几家愁

The settler violence that Rep. Ro Khanna experienced on his recent visit to the West Bank has made headlines. But what was most important about this trip wasn’t what his delegation — of which I was a part — went through, but rather the people we met in the West Bank and the truths they told.... The post The real outrage of Rep. Ro Khanna’s West Bank visit appeared first on The Forward.

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The Forward
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The settler violence that Rep. Ro Khanna experienced on his recent visit to the West Bank has made headlines. But what was most important about this trip wasn’t what his delegation — of which I was a part — went through, but rather the people we met in the West Bank and the truths they told.... The post The real outrage of Rep. Ro Khanna’s West Bank visit appeared first on The Forward.

"Time and Water," screening at Digital Gym CInema, is a cinematic elegy, quiet and devastating, that laments the losses of climate change and time.

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Times of San Diego
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"Time and Water," screening at Digital Gym CInema, is a cinematic elegy, quiet and devastating, that laments the losses of climate change and time.

Smaller, Black-led nonprofit organizations – the types that many times have the most direct connection to communities and are most in need of support – are less likely to receive adequate funding, according to a new study, conducted by Candid and the Association of Black Foundation Executives.  The study found that of the 3,500 non-profits […] The post New Study Finds Black-led Nonprofits Receive Less Funding Than White-led Organizations appeared first on The Emancipator.

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The Emancipator
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Smaller, Black-led nonprofit organizations – the types that many times have the most direct connection to communities and are most in need of support – are less likely to receive adequate funding, according to a new study, conducted by Candid and the Association of Black Foundation Executives.  The study found that of the 3,500 non-profits […] The post New Study Finds Black-led Nonprofits Receive Less Funding Than White-led Organizations appeared first on The Emancipator.