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TheWorldNewsOrg

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  1. LONDON (AP) — Nearly two dozen athletes tested positive in reanalysis of their doping samples from the 2012 London Olympics, adding to the more than 30 already caught in retesting from the 2008 Beijing Games.

    The International Olympic Committee said Friday that 23 athletes from five sports and six countries had positive findings in retests with improved techniques on 265 samples from the London Games.

    The IOC did not identify the athletes, their sports or their nationalities.

    A speedboat carrying the Olympic Flame leaves a trail on this slow exposure photograph as fireworks explode above the iconic Tower Bridge over the River Thames. (Photo: AP/Vadim Ghirda)

    A speedboat carrying the Olympic Flame leaves a trail on this slow exposure photograph as fireworks explode above the iconic Tower Bridge over the River Thames. (Photo: AP/Vadim Ghirda)

    “The reanalysis program is ongoing, with the possibility of more results in the coming weeks,” the IOC said.

    The 23 London athletes are in addition to the 31 who tested positive in retesting from the Beijing Olympics. The IOC said Friday that another sample from Beijing has since shown “abnormal parameters,” and the case was being followed up.

    Overall, up to 55 athletes from the past two Summer Olympics could be retroactively disqualified and have their results, and any medals, stripped.

    The IOC stores Olympic doping samples for 10 years so they can be reanalyzed when new testing methods become available.

    The current retesting program targeted athletes who could be eligible to compete at the Rio de Janeiro Olympics in August.

    “These reanalyses show, once again, our determination in the fight against doping,” IOC President Thomas Bach said. “We want to keep the dopers away from the Olympic Games in Rio de Janeiro. This is why we are acting swiftly now.”

    Bach said he has appointed a disciplinary commission which “has the full power” to sanction athletes.

    The IOC still has to retest the athletes’ “B” samples. Formal positive cases are not declared until the “B” samples confirm the original findings.

    The IOC said the athletes, their national Olympic committees and their international sports federations were being informed ahead of formal disciplinary proceedings.

    “All athletes found to have infringed the anti-doping rules will be banned from competing at the Olympic Games” in Rio, it said.

    The IOC said the retests were carried out using “the very latest scientific analysis methods.”

    The IOC retested 454 samples from Beijing. Of those original 31 positives, the Russian Olympic Committee confirmed that 14 involved Russian athletes.

    Russian state TV said they included 10 medalists, among them high jumper Anna Chicherova. She won the bronze medal in Beijing and went on to take gold in London.

    Match TV said 11 of the 14 athletes from Beijing were from track and field, including 4×100-meter relay gold medalist Yulia Chermoshanskaya.

    Spanish hurdler Josephine Onyia has been identified in Spain as being one of the athletes whose samples from Beijing was positive.

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  2. images?q=tbn:ANd9GcR9H9pFzh9yh-kZWdSWlhh
    Poughkeepsie Journal

    Wallkill man, two children dead in murder-suicide
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  3. images?q=tbn:ANd9GcR-5rYlcEbmh6cZfPX8OcX
    Newstalkkgvo

    Police looking for men who robbed casino, took hostages
    Albany Times Union
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  4. images?q=tbn:ANd9GcR9MzTTpOQHi6lAft3N6wr
    BBC News

    Spain: Model found guilty of murdering British millionaire
    Washington Post
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  5. images?q=tbn:ANd9GcS4IiO_8lkrZ4phvDPPaEV
    Sportsrageous

    Former softball star Jennie Finch to guest manage baseball team
    San Jose Mercury News
    Publicity stunt or not, Jennie Finch makes history this weekend. One of the most decorated softball stars of her era, Finch will become the first woman to manage a men's professional baseball team when she leads the Bridgeport Bluefish take on the ...
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  6. Chuck Todd relentlessly grilled Democratic presidential front-runner Hillary Clinton over a new State Department report on her emails during an interview Thursday on MSNBC’s “MTP Daily.”

    The agency’s inspector general found that Clinton’s email use “did not comply” with federal regulations while she was secretary of state.

    Todd told Clinton that the report “seemed to contradict many of the things you’ve said” and mentioned one specific email Clinton sent regarding her use of a private account in which she wrote “I don’t want any risk of the personal being accessible.”

    (AP Photo/Kevin Lamarque, Pool, File)

    AP Photo/Kevin Lamarque, Pool, File

    Clinton said she used one account for “convenience,” but that turned out to be a “mistake,” adding that she should have used two separate email accounts.

    “What I thought was convenient turned out to be anything but,” Clinton said.

    Todd continued to press: “What were you concerned about? FOIA requests? Congressional requests? What were you worried about being accessible?”

    Clinton replied, “Nobody wants their personal emails made public.”

    “That is, I think, a very common if not unanimous feeling among people,” she said.

    Watch below:

    Follow Kate Scanlon (@kgscanlon) on Twitter

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  7. images?q=tbn:ANd9GcTtw7aB4Iuc7qlWn69KM7m
    MMAjunkie.com

    Going to UFC 199? Fans have no shortage of pre-event activities to attend
    MMAjunkie.com
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  8. images?q=tbn:ANd9GcTpmieo_xLo5fofdwagjKw
    Austin American-Statesman

    LCRA: Colorado River cresting just above flood stage in Bastrop
    Austin American-Statesman
    Want more news? Sign up for free newsletters to get more of the Statesman delivered to your inbox. 8:25 a.m. update: The Colorado River in Bastrop has crested above flood stage, according to the Lower Colorado River Authority. At 8:10 a.m., the river ...
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  9. images?q=tbn:ANd9GcQ-mUSaAiOYIenSGsB58v1
    TSN

    The Latest: John McEnroe says he'll help Raonic at Wimbledon
    Hawaii News Now
    (AP Photo/Christophe Ena). Romania's Simona Halep returns in her third round match of the French Open tennis tournament against Japan's Naomi Osaka at the Roland Garros stadium in Paris, France, Friday, May 27, 2016. PARIS (AP) - The Latest on the ...
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  10. WASHINGTON (AP) — Since her use of a private email server was made public last year, Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton has insisted she turned over all work-related emails to the State Department to be released to the public.

    But after 14 months of public scrutiny and the release of tens of thousands of emails, an agency watchdog’s discovery of at least three previously undisclosed emails has renewed concerns that Clinton was not completely forthcoming when she turned over a trove of 55,000 pages of emails. And the revelation has spawned fresh criticism from presumptive Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump.

    AP Photo

    AP Photo

    The three messages include Clinton’s own explanation of why she wanted her emails kept private: In a November 2010 email, Clinton worried that her personal messages could become accessible to outsiders. The messages appear to have been found among electronic files of four former top Clinton State Department aides.

    Two other messages a year later divulged possible security weaknesses in the home email system she used while secretary of state. The Clinton campaign has previously denied that her home server was compromised.

    On Thursday, Clinton, who has called her use of a private email server “a mistake,” said she had been forthcoming with her personal emails and said she believed her use of a private email account was allowed.

    “I have provided all of my work-related emails, and I’ve asked that they be made public, and I think that demonstrates that I wanted to make sure that this information was part of the official records,” Clinton said, according to an interview transcript provided by ABC News.

    Most of Clinton’s emails have been made public by the State Department over the past year due to both a court order and Clinton’s willingness to turn them over. But hundreds were censored for national security reasons and 22 emails were completely withheld because the agency said they contained top secret material – a matter now under investigation by the FBI.

    Clinton said in March 2015 that she would turn over all work-related emails to the State Department after removing private messages that contained personal and family material. “No one wants their personal emails made public and I think most people understand that and respect their privacy,” she said after her exclusive use of private emails to conduct State Department business was confirmed by media reports.

    Senate investigators have asked for numerous emails about Clinton’s server as part of their own inquiry into Clinton’s email practices in recent months, but they didn’t get copies of key messages made public by the State Department’s own watchdog this week, a senior Republican senator said Thursday.

    “It is disturbing that the State Department knew it had emails like this and turned them over to the inspector general, but not to Congress,” said Iowa Sen. Charles Grassley, the chair of the Senate judiciary committee that’s been probing Clinton’s use of a private server.

    The emails appear to contain work-related passages, raising questions about why they were not turned over to the State Department last year. The inspector general noted that Clinton’s production of work-related emails was “incomplete,” missing not only the three emails but numerous others covering Clinton’s first four months in office.

    The inspector general also found Clinton’s email set up violated agency policies and could have left sensitive government information vulnerable. It also complicated federal archiving of her emails, in turn making it more difficult to obtain them under the Freedom of Information Act.

    On Thursday, Clinton told ABC News her use of the personal email was “allowed,” saying that “the rules have been clarified since I left.” In a later interview Thursday with CNN, Clinton said she “believed it was allowed.”

    A spokesman for the Clinton campaign did not respond to emailed questions Thursday. An inspector general’s spokesman declined to discuss the report.

    The report said the inspector general was able to reconstruct some of Clinton’s missing emails by searching the email files of four former Clinton aides who had turned over thousands of pages of communications in 2015 at the request of the State Department, which is defending itself in multiple public records lawsuits, including one filed by The Associated Press. The four aides who turned over those files, according to the report, were Clinton’s former chief of staff, Cheryl Mills, and top aides Huma Abedin, Jake Sullivan and Philippe Reines.

    Abedin was the aide who authored the key email in November 2010 that provoked Clinton’s concerns about outsiders obtaining her personal emails. After the State Department’s computer spam filters apparently prevented Clinton from sending a message to all department employees from her private server, Abedin suggested that she either open an official agency email or make her private address available to the agency.

    Clinton told Abedin she was open to getting a separate email address but didn’t want “any risk of the personal being accessible.” Clinton never used an official State Department address, only using several private addresses to communicate. Abedin, Mills, Sullivan and Reines all also used private email addresses to conduct business, along with their government accounts.

    Two other emails sent to Abedin were cited in the inspector general’s report, but also did not turn up among the emails released by Clinton. Those messages to Abedin contained warnings in January 2011 from an unidentified aide to former President Bill Clinton who said he had to shut down Hillary Clinton’s New York-based server because of suspected hacking attacks.

    In response, Abedin warned Mills and Sullivan not to email Clinton “anything sensitive” and said she would “explain more in person.”

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  11. Democratic presidential contender Sen. Bernie Sanders (Vt.) refused to address socialism’s impact on Latin America during a recent interview with the Spanish-language Univision.

    As first reported by Newsbusters, Sanders was asked by Univision’s Leon Krauze to explain how socialism has failed the governments of Argentina, Brazil and Venezuela. Sanders, a self-proclaimed democratic socialist, refused to comment, instead saying he was focused on his own presidential campaign in the U.S.

    “I am very interested, but right now I’m running for President of the United States,” Sanders said.

    Krauze pressed the presidential candidate and asked if he had an opinion on the dire situation in Venezuela.

    “Of course I have an opinion, but as I said, I’m focused on my campaign,” Sanders responded.

    Watch the exchange below:

    (H/T: Newsbusters)

    Follow Kaitlyn Schallhorn (@K_Schallhorn) on Twitter

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  12. images?q=tbn:ANd9GcQAebWlaXYtURtgcgAofIi
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  13. images?q=tbn:ANd9GcRbnZHzz38jstkcX6AdNjr
    Middle East Online

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  14. HIROSHIMA, Japan (AP) — Barack Obama on Friday paid tribute to the “silent cry” of the 140,000 people killed by the world’s first atomic bomb attack and sought to renew attention in his unfulfilled vision of a world without nuclear weapons, as he became the first sitting U.S. president to visit Hiroshima.

    U.S. President Barack Obama hugs Shigeaki Mori, an atomic bomb survivor; creator of the memorial for American WWII POWs killed at Hiroshima, during a ceremony at Hiroshima Peace Memorial Park in Hiroshima, western, Japan, Friday, May 27, 2016. Obama on Friday became the first sitting U.S. president to visit the site of the world's first atomic bomb attack, bringing global attention both to survivors and to his unfulfilled vision of a world without nuclear weapons. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)

    U.S. President Barack Obama hugs Shigeaki Mori, an atomic bomb survivor; creator of the memorial for American WWII POWs killed at Hiroshima, during a ceremony at Hiroshima Peace Memorial Park in Hiroshima, western, Japan, Friday, May 27, 2016. Obama on Friday became the first sitting U.S. president to visit the site of the world’s first atomic bomb attack, bringing global attention both to survivors and to his unfulfilled vision of a world without nuclear weapons. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)

    “Death fell from the sky and the world was changed,” Obama said, after laying a wreath, closing his eyes and briefly bowing his head before an arched monument in Hiroshima’s Peace Memorial Park that honors those killed on Aug. 6, 1945, when U.S. forces dropped the bomb that ushered in the nuclear age. The bombing, Obama said, “demonstrated that mankind possessed the means to destroy itself.”

    Obama did not apologize, instead offering, in a carefully choreographed display, a reflection on the horrors of war and his hope that Hiroshima would be remembered as the beginning of a “moral awakening.” As he and Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe stood near an iconic bombed-out domed building, Obama acknowledged the devastating toll of war and urged the world to do better.

    “We stand here in the middle of this city and force ourselves to imagine the moment the bomb fell … we listen to a silent cry,” Obama said.

    A second atomic bomb, dropped on Nagasaki three days after Hiroshima, killed 70,000 more.

    Obama also sought to look forward to the day when there was less danger of nuclear war. He received a Nobel Peace Prize early on in his presidency for his anti-nuclear agenda but has since seen uneven progress.

    “We must have the courage to escape the logic of fear and pursue a world without them,” Obama said of nuclear weapons.

    Following the remarks, Abe called Obama’s visit courageous and long-awaited. He said it would help the suffering of survivors and echoed the anti-nuclear sentiments.

    “At any place in world, this tragedy must not be repeated again,” Abe said.

    The visit presented a diplomatic tightrope for a U.S. president trying to make history without ripping open old wounds.

    Critics believe Obama’s mere presence in Hiroshima will be viewed as an apology for what they see as a justified attack. But he has also drawn praise from those who see it as a long overdue gesture for two allies ready to bury a troubled past.

    Obama’s remarks showed a careful awareness of the sensitivities. He included both South Koreans and American prisoners of war in recounting the death toll at Hiroshima – a nod to advocates for both groups that publicly warned the president not to forget their dead.

    U.S. President Barack Obama lays wreaths at the cenotaph at Hiroshima Peace Memorial Park in Hiroshima, western Japan, Friday, May 27, 2016. U.S. President Barack Obama lays a wreath at Hiroshima Peace Memorial Park in Hiroshima, western, Japan, Friday, May 27, 2016. Obama on Friday became the first sitting U.S. president to visit the site of the world's first atomic bomb attack, bringing global attention both to survivors and to his unfulfilled vision of a world without nuclear weapons. (AP Photo/Shuji Kajiyama)

    U.S. President Barack Obama lays wreaths at the cenotaph at Hiroshima Peace Memorial Park in Hiroshima, western Japan, Friday, May 27, 2016. U.S. President Barack Obama lays a wreath at Hiroshima Peace Memorial Park in Hiroshima, western, Japan, Friday, May 27, 2016. Obama on Friday became the first sitting U.S. president to visit the site of the world’s first atomic bomb attack, bringing global attention both to survivors and to his unfulfilled vision of a world without nuclear weapons. (AP Photo/Shuji Kajiyama)

    Obama spoke broadly of the brutality of the war that begat the bombing, but did not assign blame.

    After his remarks, he met with two survivors, but his remarks to the aging men were out of ear shot of reporters.

    At one point, Obama could be seen laughing and smiling with 91-year-old Sunao Tsuboi, and he embraced Shigeaki Mori, 79, in a hug. But mostly, Obama just listened the men as they spoke through an interpreter.

    The visit was meant to demonstrate the strength of the U.S.-Japanese alliance, and Obama and Abe took each step together. The men walked along a tree-lined path, past an eternal flame, toward a river that flows by the domed building that many associate with Hiroshima.

    They went to the lobby of the peace museum to sign the guest book: “?We have known the agony of war. Let us now find the courage, together, to spread peace, and pursue a world without nuclear weapons,” Obama wrote, according to the White House.

    The president’s call for a nuclear-free world was a far cry from the optimistic rallying cry he delivered as young, newly elected president. Obama did not employ his campaign slogan – “Yes, we can” – as he did in a speech in Prague in 2009. Instead, the president hoped for the “courage to escape the logic of fear” and spoke of diligent, incremental steps.

    “We may not realize this goal in my lifetime but persistent effort can roll back the possibility of catastrophe,” he said. “We can chart a course that leads to the destruction of these stockpiles.”

    Obama touched down in Hiroshima after completing talks with world leaders at an international summit in Shima, Japan.

    in Tokyo, Friday, May 27, 2016. (AP Photo/Shuji Kajiyama)

    in Tokyo, Friday, May 27, 2016. (AP Photo/Shuji Kajiyama)

    Those who come to ground zero at Hiroshima speak of its emotional impact, of the searing imagery of the exposed steel beams on the iconic A-bomb dome. The skeletal remains of the exhibition hall have become an international symbol of peace and a place for prayer.

    Bomb survivor Kinuyo Ikegami, 82, paid her own respects at the cenotaph on Friday morning, well before Obama arrived, lighting incense and chanting a prayer.

    Tears ran down her face as she described the immediate aftermath of the bomb.

    “I could hear schoolchildren screaming: ‘Help me! Help me!’” she said. “It was too pitiful, too horrible. Even now it fills me with emotion.”

    Han Jeong-soon, the 58-year-old daughter of a Korean survivor, was also at the park Friday.

    “The suffering, such as illness, gets carried on over the generations – that is what I want President Obama to know,” she said. “I want him to understand our sufferings.”

    Obama’s visit is a moment 71 years in the making. Other American presidents considered coming, but the politics were still too sensitive, the emotions too raw. Jimmy Carter visited as a former president in 1984.

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    NJ.com

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    USA TODAY

    In pursuit of brook trout in Great Smoky Mountains National Park
    USA TODAY
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    CBS Local

    Bound Body Found In Trunk Of Burned Car In Penn Hills
    CBS Local
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