The right-hander recently discussed for the first time how extensive his 2024 surgery was. Musgrove's procedure went well beyond traditional Tommy John surgery.

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Times of San Diego
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The right-hander recently discussed for the first time how extensive his 2024 surgery was. Musgrove's procedure went well beyond traditional Tommy John surgery.

Alexander Volfovich, the state secretary of Belarus’s Security Council, urged Belarusians to avoid traveling to Russia, particularly to border regions.

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Meduza
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Alexander Volfovich, the state secretary of Belarus’s Security Council, urged Belarusians to avoid traveling to Russia, particularly to border regions.

Sign up for Chalkbeat Colorado’s free daily newsletter to get the latest reporting from us, plus curated news from other Colorado outlets, delivered to your inbox.A recent law change aimed at what some Colorado lawmakers saw as a rogue school authorizing group quickly changed the trajectory of three public schools this spring. One closed, one will stay open, and the fate of the third is a mystery. The new law put strict limits on the school-authorizing power of Boards of Cooperative Educational Services, or BOCES. It passed quickly in the last days of this spring’s legislative session, a sign of the urgency lawmakers felt in their bid to rein in one particular BOCES: Education reEnvisioned. The Monument-based group, often called ERBOCES, started a controversial “public Christian school” last August and fueled explosive growth in homeschool enrichment programs that cost the state tens of millions of dollars. The law forced ERBOCES’ three brick-and-mortar schools to find a new path forward or shut down. Riverstone Academy, the public Christian school, closed at the end of the school year. It had about 30 elementary students.Ascend College Prep became a charter school after winning authorization last month from the Charter School Institute, a statewide charter authorizer. Last year, the Colorado Springs school served 116 students in grades 10 through 12.It’s not clear what will happen to the third school, the 260-student Pueblo Classical Academy. School leaders were unsuccessful in their recent effort to become a charter school authorized by Pueblo School District 60. They haven’t responded to questions about whether the school will close or obtain a new arrangement that will allow it to stay open. The new law bars BOCES from authorizing schools outside their member school districts and from having brick-and-mortar schools entirely run by contractors. Since Riverstone, Ascend, and Pueblo Classical were outside ERBOCES’ member school districts and run by contractors, they didn’t meet the new law’s requirements.Riverstone’s leader, Quin Friberg, didn’t respond to a request for comment about why he didn’t seek a new authorizer for the school. Riverstone had been forced out of its original building midway through the school year because of safety concerns and hadn’t completed the required improvements to move back in. After the law change, Ascend officials rushed to convert it to a charter school under the umbrella of the Charter School Institute, a move that also required approval from Academy District 20, where the school is located. Both tasks had to be finished in about six weeks.Ascend Principal Karin McWhorter said her team was blindsided by the abrupt law change. “Ascend has done everything right for five years,” she said. “We keep meticulous records, we have a 100% graduation rate, we follow every single law and regulation to the letter, and so … my initial thought was, it felt very unfair.”McWhorter said becoming a charter school will also bring benefits, including access to certain kinds of capital project funding for schools. McWhorter opened Ascend in 2021 after teaching at the Air Force Academy and finding that some students arrived unprepared for college-level work. She started the school with high school juniors and seniors, then added sophomores in its third year so there would be enough students to receive a state rating. The school, housed in leased office space, caps classes at 16 students and enrollment at 125.Pueblo Classical Academy has recently posted school supply lists and enrollment forms for the 2026-27 year, but it’s not clear how the school will open without a new authorizer. Pueblo Classical has a history of switching authorizers. It opened in 2021 with ERBOCES as its authorizer. In 2022, it became a charter school authorized by District 70. But in 2024, the district revoked its charter because of financial breaches and its failure to report an employee’s arrest, among other concerns. At that point, the school returned to ERBOCES. Spokespeople for Pueblo County District 70, where the school is located, and the Charter School Institute said Pueblo Classical had not applied to them for authorization. Ken Witt, ERBOCES’ executive director, said by email Wednesday he doesn’t know if Pueblo Classical has found a new authorizer. Dave Martin, the head of the three-school network that includes Pueblo Classical, didn’t respond to repeated email and phone messages asking about the school’s plans for the coming year. Martin did speak to Chalkbeat just before the June 23 vote by the Pueblo 60 school board on whether to authorize Pueblo Classical as a charter school. He expressed frustration over the sudden law change, saying his students were getting caught in the political crossfire. “Shame on those folks who swing to the right, and shame on those folks who swing to the left, because at the end of the day, not one of those 260 families that we serve had anything to do with either side,” he said. Ann Schimke is a senior reporter at Chalkbeat. Contact Ann at aschimke@chalkbeat.org.

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Chalkbeat
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Sign up for Chalkbeat Colorado’s free daily newsletter to get the latest reporting from us, plus curated news from other Colorado outlets, delivered to your inbox.A recent law change aimed at what some Colorado lawmakers saw as a rogue school authorizing group quickly changed the trajectory of three public schools this spring. One closed, one will stay open, and the fate of the third is a mystery. The new law put strict limits on the school-authorizing power of Boards of Cooperative Educational Services, or BOCES. It passed quickly in the last days of this spring’s legislative session, a sign of the urgency lawmakers felt in their bid to rein in one particular BOCES: Education reEnvisioned. The Monument-based group, often called ERBOCES, started a controversial “public Christian school” last August and fueled explosive growth in homeschool enrichment programs that cost the state tens of millions of dollars. The law forced ERBOCES’ three brick-and-mortar schools to find a new path forward or shut down. Riverstone Academy, the public Christian school, closed at the end of the school year. It had about 30 elementary students.Ascend College Prep became a charter school after winning authorization last month from the Charter School Institute, a statewide charter authorizer. Last year, the Colorado Springs school served 116 students in grades 10 through 12.It’s not clear what will happen to the third school, the 260-student Pueblo Classical Academy. School leaders were unsuccessful in their recent effort to become a charter school authorized by Pueblo School District 60. They haven’t responded to questions about whether the school will close or obtain a new arrangement that will allow it to stay open. The new law bars BOCES from authorizing schools outside their member school districts and from having brick-and-mortar schools entirely run by contractors. Since Riverstone, Ascend, and Pueblo Classical were outside ERBOCES’ member school districts and run by contractors, they didn’t meet the new law’s requirements.Riverstone’s leader, Quin Friberg, didn’t respond to a request for comment about why he didn’t seek a new authorizer for the school. Riverstone had been forced out of its original building midway through the school year because of safety concerns and hadn’t completed the required improvements to move back in. After the law change, Ascend officials rushed to convert it to a charter school under the umbrella of the Charter School Institute, a move that also required approval from Academy District 20, where the school is located. Both tasks had to be finished in about six weeks.Ascend Principal Karin McWhorter said her team was blindsided by the abrupt law change. “Ascend has done everything right for five years,” she said. “We keep meticulous records, we have a 100% graduation rate, we follow every single law and regulation to the letter, and so … my initial thought was, it felt very unfair.”McWhorter said becoming a charter school will also bring benefits, including access to certain kinds of capital project funding for schools. McWhorter opened Ascend in 2021 after teaching at the Air Force Academy and finding that some students arrived unprepared for college-level work. She started the school with high school juniors and seniors, then added sophomores in its third year so there would be enough students to receive a state rating. The school, housed in leased office space, caps classes at 16 students and enrollment at 125.Pueblo Classical Academy has recently posted school supply lists and enrollment forms for the 2026-27 year, but it’s not clear how the school will open without a new authorizer. Pueblo Classical has a history of switching authorizers. It opened in 2021 with ERBOCES as its authorizer. In 2022, it became a charter school authorized by District 70. But in 2024, the district revoked its charter because of financial breaches and its failure to report an employee’s arrest, among other concerns. At that point, the school returned to ERBOCES. Spokespeople for Pueblo County District 70, where the school is located, and the Charter School Institute said Pueblo Classical had not applied to them for authorization. Ken Witt, ERBOCES’ executive director, said by email Wednesday he doesn’t know if Pueblo Classical has found a new authorizer. Dave Martin, the head of the three-school network that includes Pueblo Classical, didn’t respond to repeated email and phone messages asking about the school’s plans for the coming year. Martin did speak to Chalkbeat just before the June 23 vote by the Pueblo 60 school board on whether to authorize Pueblo Classical as a charter school. He expressed frustration over the sudden law change, saying his students were getting caught in the political crossfire. “Shame on those folks who swing to the right, and shame on those folks who swing to the left, because at the end of the day, not one of those 260 families that we serve had anything to do with either side,” he said. Ann Schimke is a senior reporter at Chalkbeat. Contact Ann at aschimke@chalkbeat.org.

Mientras los grandes bancos y empresas del Ibex 35 baten récords de beneficios y el capital extranjero aumenta su peso en la economía española, crece el debate sobre quién se beneficia realmente de esa riqueza.

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Mundiario
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Mientras los grandes bancos y empresas del Ibex 35 baten récords de beneficios y el capital extranjero aumenta su peso en la economía española, crece el debate sobre quién se beneficia realmente de esa riqueza.

12 minutes

Iowa Capital Dispatch
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Law enforcement officials have seized 32 dogs from an Iowa breeder already facing civil charges related to inspections of her facility in Farmington. The dogs were seized Tuesday from the property run by licensed dog breeder Wuanita Swedlund. They were taken to the PAW animal shelter in Fort Dodge, where they are receiving medical attention. […]

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Iowa Capital Dispatch
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Law enforcement officials have seized 32 dogs from an Iowa breeder already facing civil charges related to inspections of her facility in Farmington. The dogs were seized Tuesday from the property run by licensed dog breeder Wuanita Swedlund. They were taken to the PAW animal shelter in Fort Dodge, where they are receiving medical attention. […]

14 minutes

Tennessee Lookout
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Tennessee’s emergency management services are now housed in a new state department: the Tennessee Emergency Management Authority. The former Tennessee Emergency Management Agency was housed in the state’s Department of Military. The transition to a standalone department “better reflects our statewide role,” the newly minted department stated in a social media post Wednesday. The move […]

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Tennessee Lookout
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Tennessee’s emergency management services are now housed in a new state department: the Tennessee Emergency Management Authority. The former Tennessee Emergency Management Agency was housed in the state’s Department of Military. The transition to a standalone department “better reflects our statewide role,” the newly minted department stated in a social media post Wednesday. The move […]

Haiti je pod kontrolom naoružanih bandi koje kontrolišu veći deo glavnog grada, Port-o-Prensa, i glavne nacionalne autoputeve, primenjujući nasilje koje uključuje seksualne napade, otmice, iznude i paljevine.

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Global Voices
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Haiti je pod kontrolom naoružanih bandi koje kontrolišu veći deo glavnog grada, Port-o-Prensa, i glavne nacionalne autoputeve, primenjujući nasilje koje uključuje seksualne napade, otmice, iznude i paljevine.

The National Weather Service confirmed the Murphy Lake Tornado on July 2, 2026, based on drone imagery and local resident reports of damage.

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KAXE
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The National Weather Service confirmed the Murphy Lake Tornado on July 2, 2026, based on drone imagery and local resident reports of damage.

Gustavo Menon avalia que sanções se somam a outras ações que visam impactar governos progressistas Fonte

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Brasil de Fato
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Gustavo Menon avalia que sanções se somam a outras ações que visam impactar governos progressistas Fonte

La pérdida o el robo de una green card puede convertirse en un dolor de cabeza para los residentes permanentes legales en Estados Unidos. La entrada ¿Perdió su green card? Esto es lo que debe hacer para evitar más problemas se publicó primero en Enlace Latino NC. ¿Perdió su green card? Esto es lo que debe hacer para evitar más problemas was first posted on julio 2, 2026 at 4:02 pm.©2024 "Enlace Latino NC". Use of this feed is for personal non-commercial use only. If you are not reading this article in your feed reader, then the site is guilty of copyright infringement. Please contact me at paola@enlacelatinonc.org

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Enlace Latino NC
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La pérdida o el robo de una green card puede convertirse en un dolor de cabeza para los residentes permanentes legales en Estados Unidos. La entrada ¿Perdió su green card? Esto es lo que debe hacer para evitar más problemas se publicó primero en Enlace Latino NC. ¿Perdió su green card? Esto es lo que debe hacer para evitar más problemas was first posted on julio 2, 2026 at 4:02 pm.©2024 "Enlace Latino NC". Use of this feed is for personal non-commercial use only. If you are not reading this article in your feed reader, then the site is guilty of copyright infringement. Please contact me at paola@enlacelatinonc.org

Kentucky’s utility regulator has launched an investigation into concerns it has about “troubling” managerial and planning practices at investor-owned electric utility Kentucky Power.  The Kentucky Public Service Commission wrote in a Thursday morning order that it was opening an investigation into the Eastern Kentucky utility following years of concerns the regulator and the Kentucky Attorney […]

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Kentucky Lantern
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Kentucky’s utility regulator has launched an investigation into concerns it has about “troubling” managerial and planning practices at investor-owned electric utility Kentucky Power.  The Kentucky Public Service Commission wrote in a Thursday morning order that it was opening an investigation into the Eastern Kentucky utility following years of concerns the regulator and the Kentucky Attorney […]

North Carolina’s new budget for fiscal year 2026-27 — passed on Thursday — directs $97 million, recurring, in federal funds to raise the rates child care providers receive to serve children through the state’s subsidy program. The program helps low-income... The post New NC budget includes $97 million for child care subsidy program, establishes floor rate appeared first on EdNC.

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EducationNC
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North Carolina’s new budget for fiscal year 2026-27 — passed on Thursday — directs $97 million, recurring, in federal funds to raise the rates child care providers receive to serve children through the state’s subsidy program. The program helps low-income... The post New NC budget includes $97 million for child care subsidy program, establishes floor rate appeared first on EdNC.

La ampliación del acceso a la nacionalidad para los descendientes de emigrantes españoles ha reabierto un intenso debate político en el que, para algunos sectores, la llamada ley de nietos se mezcla con acusaciones de supuesto fraude electoral.

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Mundiario
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La ampliación del acceso a la nacionalidad para los descendientes de emigrantes españoles ha reabierto un intenso debate político en el que, para algunos sectores, la llamada ley de nietos se mezcla con acusaciones de supuesto fraude electoral.

21 minutes

The Center Square
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(The Center Square) – After the U.S. Supreme Court agreed to consider a case challenging Cook County’s ban on semiautomatic weapons, Gov. J.B. Pritzker cited the 2022 Highland Park parade shooting as a reason why Illinois’ statewide ban should be upheld. The governor spoke at a cannabis dispensary in Chicago on Thursday, two days after the U.S. Supreme Court agreed to hear Viramontes v. Cook County and a similar case in Connecticut. The governor said his office is assisting the Illinois Attorney General to protect the people’s rights. “The rights of people to go to a 4th of July parade and be safe, and not have 48 people shot with more than 60 bullets per second, issued by a weapon that shouldn't be available to the public,” Pritzker said. Seven people died and dozens more were injured during the parade on July 4, 2022. Pritzker said Illinois banned the weapons statewide for a reason. “Our families ought to live in peace. We don't need those kinds of weapons. We can stand for the Second Amendment and allow people to have weapons to defend themselves. They don't need a weapon that can fire that many bullets in a single second,” the governor said. Pritzker signed the Illinois ban in 2023. Cook County’s ban has been in place since 1993. Second Amendment Foundation founder Alan Gottlieb told The Center Square’s Greg Bishop it’s long overdue for the case to be heard. “There’s no doubt in my mind, I believe, that those bans are going to bite the dust. I don’t think the Supreme Court would have taken the case if they weren’t going to overturn the bans,” Gottlieb said on “The States.” A ruling in Viramontes v. Cook County is not expected until June 2027. Greg Bishop and Sean Reed contributed to this story

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The Center Square
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(The Center Square) – After the U.S. Supreme Court agreed to consider a case challenging Cook County’s ban on semiautomatic weapons, Gov. J.B. Pritzker cited the 2022 Highland Park parade shooting as a reason why Illinois’ statewide ban should be upheld. The governor spoke at a cannabis dispensary in Chicago on Thursday, two days after the U.S. Supreme Court agreed to hear Viramontes v. Cook County and a similar case in Connecticut. The governor said his office is assisting the Illinois Attorney General to protect the people’s rights. “The rights of people to go to a 4th of July parade and be safe, and not have 48 people shot with more than 60 bullets per second, issued by a weapon that shouldn't be available to the public,” Pritzker said. Seven people died and dozens more were injured during the parade on July 4, 2022. Pritzker said Illinois banned the weapons statewide for a reason. “Our families ought to live in peace. We don't need those kinds of weapons. We can stand for the Second Amendment and allow people to have weapons to defend themselves. They don't need a weapon that can fire that many bullets in a single second,” the governor said. Pritzker signed the Illinois ban in 2023. Cook County’s ban has been in place since 1993. Second Amendment Foundation founder Alan Gottlieb told The Center Square’s Greg Bishop it’s long overdue for the case to be heard. “There’s no doubt in my mind, I believe, that those bans are going to bite the dust. I don’t think the Supreme Court would have taken the case if they weren’t going to overturn the bans,” Gottlieb said on “The States.” A ruling in Viramontes v. Cook County is not expected until June 2027. Greg Bishop and Sean Reed contributed to this story

21 minutes

Times of San Diego
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With Independence Day on a weekend this year, that means a whole other set of events on top of the usual Americaness goings-on.

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Times of San Diego
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With Independence Day on a weekend this year, that means a whole other set of events on top of the usual Americaness goings-on.

21 minutes

Adirondack Explorer
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Marty Podskoch shares a frightening account from a 1949 fire tower observer of his encounter with the mythical Bigfoot

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Adirondack Explorer
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Marty Podskoch shares a frightening account from a 1949 fire tower observer of his encounter with the mythical Bigfoot

21 minutes

Devpolicy Blog
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New World Bank and ADB rules require local labour quotas on infrastructure contracts. But will a 30% labour-cost threshold really shift the skills imbalance in PNG, or is a more direct training-linked approach needed?About the author/sRichard CurtainDr Richard Curtain is a research associate, and recent former research fellow, with the Development Policy Centre. He is an expert on Pacific labour markets and migration.

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Devpolicy Blog
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New World Bank and ADB rules require local labour quotas on infrastructure contracts. But will a 30% labour-cost threshold really shift the skills imbalance in PNG, or is a more direct training-linked approach needed?About the author/sRichard CurtainDr Richard Curtain is a research associate, and recent former research fellow, with the Development Policy Centre. He is an expert on Pacific labour markets and migration.

Una mujer en Salta lleva 6 años denunciando a su exesposo, el abogado salteño Matías Sanz Navamuel, por ya incontables hechos de amenazas de muerte que hasta ahora no han cesado. P. F. volvió a recurrir a la Justicia por notas intimidatorias contra ella, su hijo, su abogado querellante y también contra su actual pareja […]

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ANRed
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Una mujer en Salta lleva 6 años denunciando a su exesposo, el abogado salteño Matías Sanz Navamuel, por ya incontables hechos de amenazas de muerte que hasta ahora no han cesado. P. F. volvió a recurrir a la Justicia por notas intimidatorias contra ella, su hijo, su abogado querellante y también contra su actual pareja […]

Rhode Island is the proud owner of three historic copies of the Declaration of Independence, dating back to nine days after the original document was adopted on July 4, 1776. Typically, you can only view the documents by appointment at the State Archives in Providence. But they are touring the Ocean State this summer, and […]

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Rhode Island Current
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Rhode Island is the proud owner of three historic copies of the Declaration of Independence, dating back to nine days after the original document was adopted on July 4, 1776. Typically, you can only view the documents by appointment at the State Archives in Providence. But they are touring the Ocean State this summer, and […]

In a 2-1 vote Thursday morning, commissioners gave Gray a 20-day written notice of termination as required under her contract.

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The Maine Monitor
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In a 2-1 vote Thursday morning, commissioners gave Gray a 20-day written notice of termination as required under her contract.