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TheWorldNewsOrg

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  1. images?q=tbn:ANd9GcTHcEJ7rF8fHJZQ3T8weP3
    BBC News

    Peanut curry death: Restaurant owner Mohammed Zaman jailed
    BBC News
    A "reckless" restaurant owner has been jailed for six years for the manslaughter of a customer who had an allergic reaction to a curry. Paul Wilson, 38, suffered a severe anaphylactic shock in January 2014 after eating a takeaway containing peanuts ...
    British Restaurateur Sentenced to 6 Years After Peanut Allergy DeathNew York Times
    Restaurant owner guilty of manslaughter after man dies of allergyNew York Daily News
    Indian restaurant owner jailed for manslaughter over peanut allergy deathABC Online
    Newser -India West -New York Post -Telegraph.co.uk
    all 80 news articles »

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  2. images?q=tbn:ANd9GcSjnyok8KZjHPi4OvDiyrF
    NBCSports.com

    Pitt RB James Conner tweets his 'body is clean of cancer'
    NBCSports.com
    Late Monday afternoon, Pittsburgh running back James Conner tweeted out the words he's been waiting months to say: “Just got the call that my body is clean of cancer!!!” The news comes five months after Conner revealed that he had been diagnosed with ...
    Pittsburgh star RB James Conner says he is cancer freeUSA TODAY
    Pitt RB James Conner announces he is cancer freeSports Illustrated
    Pittsburgh RB James Conner announces he is cancer-freeNFL.com
    Syracuse.com -Orlando Sentinel -FanSided -NCAA.com
    all 15 news articles »

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  3. images?q=tbn:ANd9GcQNbL1T_i3FcCE86twDGIa
    KOCO Oklahoma City

    OSBI investigates 2 weekend deaths at Oklahoma County Jail
    KOCO Oklahoma City
    OKLAHOMA CITY —The Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation is looking into the weekend deaths of two Oklahoma County Jail inmates. Related. Senate OKs sending alcohol proposal... Bill addressing court's sodomy ruling... Medicaid expansion plan ...
    Authorities investigate deaths at Oklahoma County jailSan Francisco Chronicle
    OSBI investigating two weekend deaths at the Oklahoma County JailKTUL

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  4. images?q=tbn:ANd9GcRwzLY4NQhvV7GtyyBND2_
    New York Times

    French Open Day 2: Wawrinka, Muguruza survive early tests
    Sports Illustrated
    A recap of the action on Day 2 on Monday at the French Open in Paris, including results, tweets, hot shots, photos and more. Results Roundup. • After defeating Novak Djokovic to win the Italian Open title last week, Andy Murray started flat in his ...
    Andy Murray trailing overnight at French Open; Stan Wawrinka survives scareUSA TODAY
    Defending Champ Stan Wawrinka Under the Radar at 2016 French Open and That's OKBleacher Report
    The Best Title Defense is a Good OffenseTennis Magazine
    ESPN -ATP World Tour -FOXSports.com -SB Nation
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  5. Democratic presidential front-runner Hillary Clinton declared at the annual SEIU Convention in Detroit Monday that presumptive Republican nominee Donald Trump could bankrupt the United States.

    Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton speaks at the Service Employees International Union (SEIU) 2016 International Convention at Cobo Center May 23, 2016 in Detroit, Michigan. Recent polls show Clinton in a tight race with Republican candidate Donald Trump. (Photo by Bill Pugliano/Getty Images)

    Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton speaks at the Service Employees International Union 2016 International Convention in Detroit, Michigan, Monday. (Bill Pugliano/Getty Images)

    Donning SEIU purple, Clinton told the crowd of union workers, “Trump economics is a recipe for lower wages, fewer jobs, more debt. He could bankrupt America like he’s bankrupted his companies.”

    “I mean, ask yourself: How can anybody lose money running a casino, really?” she added.

    According to CNN Money, Trump has filed four business bankruptcies but has never filed for personal bankruptcy. His most recent bankruptcy was filed in 2009.

    During the first Republican presidential debate Aug. 6, Trump said he has used bankruptcy chapter laws “to do a great job for my company, for myself, for my employees, for my family.”

    Follow Kate Scanlon (@kgscanlon) on Twitter

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  6. A North Carolina mother of two had a frightening run-in with police during what was supposed to be a luxurious family vacation. Julie Mall, 43, of Charlotte, was only two days into the July trip to Bald Head Island when a police officer pulled her family over as they were heading back to their $1,000-a-night cottage.

    Mall had told her then-11-year-old son that he could shuttle the family back in their golf cart. The officer who pulled the family over accused Mall of being intoxicated at the time the incident occurred. She now faces charges of child abuse.

    According to the Charlotte Observer, Mall and her family had been vacationing in Bald Head for years. The island replaces cars with golf carts.

    Image source: Charlotte Observer

    Image source: Charlotte Observer

    Mall explained to the Observer that shortly after she had agreed to let her son to drive the short two blocks back to their cottage, a police cart approached with its lights flashing. Mall’s husband Scott, their 11-year-old son Josh and 9-year-old daughter Erin, her 22-year-old niece Stephanie and her dog Rocket were all piled into the family cart.

    “Immediately he started berating us,” Mall told the Observer.

    “He was saying, ‘How old is this kid?’ ‘Are you guys drunk?’ ‘I could write you up for child abuse,’” she recalled.

    Mall’s niece, who was in the rear seat of the golf cart at the time they were approached, told the Observer that the officer seemed hostile from the start.

    “I thought maybe he was having a bad day. He was agitated. He was yelling, making vigorous hand gestures, leaning into the golf cart,” Stephanie Phelps said.

    Mall maintains that she had no more than a glass of wine with dinner hours before the confrontation and that no one in the golf cart was intoxicated. After the officer threatened to write Mall up for abuse, 11-year-old Josh began crying. She then asked her niece to take the kids back to the cottage.

    Once the kids were gone, Mall said she told the officer, “You ought to be ashamed of yourself,” and stuck her finger in his face.

    According to Mall, the officer didn’t have a citation book with him at the time, so he radioed for another officer to bring him one. A second police cart arrived shortly after, followed by a third.

    She told the Observer that she was standing off the roadway at the time, tapping away on her phone, when the original officer came over and told her she was blocking traffic and needed to return to her golf cart, which her niece had already taken home.

    The police vehicles also had the road blocked at the time.

    “He said, ‘You need to go back to your golf cart, or I’m going to cuff you,’” Mall claimed.

    Image source: Charlotte Observer

    Image source: Charlotte Observer

    After this, the situation quickly escalated into violence.

    “He lunged across at me, twisting my arm behind my back. I’m hysterical. I’ve never been that scared of anything in my life,” Mall said.

    Mall’s husband, who was in disbelief, told the Observer his instinct was to film what was happening to his wife because he felt “this wasn’t an up-and-up situation.”

    After officers cuffed a kicking and screaming Mall at the arms and legs, they took her to the police station, where she was charged with resisting a public officer, intoxicated and disruptive behavior and misdemeanor child abuse.

    According to the Observer, the official police report stated that both Julie Hall and Scott Hall were intoxicated when their cart was pulled over after the first officer noticed an underage driver operating the vehicle.

    Julie Mall was ‘”agitated and loud, standing in the middle of the street and interfering with passing vehicular and pedestrian traffic,” according to the report.

    The arresting officer claimed Mall refused to move off the road, and so he moved to arrest her.

    “In attempting to secure the custody of the female, same dropped to the ground and began screaming and flailing around, refusing to surrender her hands or obey officer commands,” the report stated.

    Bald Head Village Attorney Charles Baldwin told the Observer that the village declined to comment on the specifics of the case in light of potential further legal action. He did, however, say that Bald Head supports how its officers handled the situation.

    “Officers on scene acted appropriately and in their best judgment for the safety of the child and also of the adults involved,” he told the Observer in a statement.

    Mall was summoned to court twice for the incident — in August and October — but the charges against her were dropped when the arresting officer failed to show up for both court dates.

    The Observer noted that charges could be reinstated by the district attorney’s office up to two years after the offense, according to North Carolina law.

    Mall told the outlet she is worried that the charges might affect her charity work and volunteering at her children’s school, where regular background checks are performed.

    But more than anything, Mall fears that if she doesn’t speak up, the incident might be repeated.

    “I just want it on the record,” she said, “in case it happens to someone else.”

    Watch:

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    Former NBA Star Accuses Fellow Train Passenger of Blatant Racism, Publishes Her Photo Online

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  7. images?q=tbn:ANd9GcQYtwZOJyplRoOtihzwUca
    Cincinnati.com

    Slain motorist's 13 children get $218000 each in settlement
    Tulsa World
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  8. images?q=tbn:ANd9GcTerwfuKaFlHDvZ9EoBzAO
    News18

    A tale of two No. 2-seeds Murray, Radwanska on French Open Day 2
    Sports Illustrated
    Get all of Jon Wertheim's columns as soon as they're published. Download the new Sports Illustrated app (iOS or Android) and personalize your experience by following your favorite teams and SI writers. PARIS – Five thoughts from a soaked Monday at ...
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  9. images?q=tbn:ANd9GcREowvsGPuPAWNkncEVEjX
    Philly.com

    Deal reached to keep Atlantic City from running out of cash
    Washington Post
    TRENTON, N.J. — New Jersey lawmakers agreed Monday on an Atlantic City rescue package to keep the iconic home of Miss America, salt water taffy and oceanfront casinos from running out of money. Leaders of the state Assembly and Senate reached a ...
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    New Atlantic City rescue bill passes committeePress of Atlantic City
    AC casino profits up 31 percent in hopeful sign for cityMiami Herald
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  10. Robert Morris, pastor of Gateway Church in Southlake, Texas, is hoping to help people better connect with God, telling The Church Boys podcast in a recent interview that he believes that some people have misconceptions about how God communicated in the Bible.

    “I think sometimes we have a misconception of how God spoke in the Bible,” said Morris, author of the new book, “Frequency: Tune In. Hear God.” “I think they had to hear by faith. I think we need to trust that God speaks in our spirit.”

    Rather than a terrifying and booming voice, God oft-times spoke in more subdued ways, he argued.

    Listen to Morris explain these issues at the 34:00-mark below:

    The preacher offered the example of a thought coming to a person’s mind imploring him or her to share an encouraging message or Bible verse with someone, only to find out that the same individual had recently been reading the same verse.

    Rather than a random happening, Morris said that there are times in which those ideas come from the Lord, labeling such dynamic as forms of communication with God.

    “I think if we take away some of the misconception and the mystery of God speaking we’ll understand,” he said. “We’ve been hearing God for quite a while [even if we don't recognize that it was him speaking].”

    Morris said that Christians can hear God if they “tune into the right frequency,” explaining his belief that God wishes to have relationships with every individual.

    “The Bible starts with [God] speaking to his kids — Adam and Eve — in the garden,” he said, noting that the New Testament closes with God speaking to John in Revelation.

    Pastor Robert Morris (Facebook/Robert Morris)

    Pastor Robert Morris (Facebook/Robert Morris)

    In the end, Morris said that it is essential that people value the prospect of “hearing God’s voice,” saying that individuals generally make time for the things that they revere; he called upon people to do the same when it comes to God.

    “We’ve got to value hearing God and so making time to slow down in the mornings — or whenever that time is … is extremely important,” he said.

    Morris also explained how he believes that Christians can know that a message they’re receiving is coming from God and not from their own perceptions or self-interest, offering up these three criteria and questions: ”Does it line up with the Bible?” “Does godly council agree?” and “Do we have peace?”

    Find out more about ”Frequency: Tune In. Hear God.

    Follow the author of this story on Twitter and Facebook and check out his new book “The Armageddon Code: One Journalist’s Quest for End-Times Answers”:

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  11. NEW YORK (TheBlaze/AP) — Presumptive Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump met with GOP Sen. Bob Corker in New York Monday, intensifying speculation that Trump is considering the Tennessee senator for his running mate.

    However, after his meeting with Trump, Corker was dismissive of such speculation, telling reporters that their conversation was a way for “two people who didn’t know each other except over phone calls” to get to know one another.

    This April 30, 2014 file photo shows Sen. Bob Corker, R-Tenn. on Capitol Hill in Washington.  (AP Photo, File)

    Tennessee Republican Sen. Bob Corker (AP Photo, File)

    Corker, who currently serves as chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, denied that Trump was vetting him for vice president or a Cabinet position should Trump win the general election.

    “I have no reason whatsoever to believe I am being considered for a position like that,” Corker said.

    A Trump campaign spokeswoman did not immediately respond to the AP’s request for comment on the meeting.

    In a statement last month, Corker praised Trump’s high-profile foreign policy speech, saying, “In a year where angry rhetoric has defined the presidential race on both sides of the aisle, it is my hope that candidates in both parties will begin focusing not only on the problems we face but on solutions.”

    Last week, conservative pundit Charles Krauthammer speculated that Corker is most likely be tapped by Trump for vice president.

    Krauthammer said the senator has “a bit of gravitas” and noted his praise of Trump’s speech.

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  12. images?q=tbn:ANd9GcStM2jlomhqMrwaPnkwoWm
    CBS Local

    Person Rescued From Under Train At Embarcadero BART Station
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  13. images?q=tbn:ANd9GcSvHTsWX6QJ3kanG9XIB19
    ESPN

    Eli Apple's mom, Annie, to contribute to ESPN's Sunday NFL Countdown
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  14. WASHINGTON (AP) — The Supreme Court upended the conviction and death sentence of a black Georgia man Monday because prosecutors violated the Constitution by excluding African-Americans from the all-white jury that determined his fate.

    This undated photo made available by the Georgia Department of Corrections, shows Timothy Tyrone Foster. The Supreme Court has thrown out a death sentence handed to Foster because prosecutors improperly kept African-Americans off the jury that convicted Foster of killing a white woman. The justices ruled 7-1 Monday, May 23, 2016. The outcome probably will enable Foster to win a new trial, 29 years after he was sentence to death. (Georgia Department of Corrections via AP)

    This undated photo made available by the Georgia Department of Corrections, shows Timothy Tyrone Foster. The Supreme Court has thrown out a death sentence handed to Foster because prosecutors improperly kept African-Americans off the jury that convicted Foster of killing a white woman. The justices ruled 7-1 Monday, May 23, 2016. The outcome probably will enable Foster to win a new trial, 29 years after he was sentence to death. (Georgia Department of Corrections via AP)

    The 7-1 ruling in favor of death row inmate Timothy Tyrone Foster came in a case in which defense lawyers obtained strikingly frank notes from prosecutors detailing efforts to keep African-Americans off of Foster’s jury. The decision broke no new ground in efforts to fight racial discrimination in jury selection, but underscored the importance of a 30-year-old high court ruling that took aim at the exclusion of minorities from juries.

    Chief Justice John Roberts wrote for the court that “prosecutors were motivated in substantial part by race” when they struck African-Americans from the jury pool, focusing on the decision to exclude two black jurors. Two such jury strikes “on the basis of race are two more than the Constitution allows,” Roberts wrote.

    The high court returned Foster’s case to state court, but Stephen Bright, Foster’s Atlanta-based lawyer, said “there is no doubt” that the decision Monday means Foster is entitled to a new trial, 29 years after he was sentenced to death for killing a white woman.

    The decision did nothing, however, to limit peremptory strikes, lawyers’ ability to reject potential jurors without offering any reason. The late Thurgood Marshall, the first African-American to serve on the Supreme Court, once said that racial discrimination would persist in jury selection unless peremptory strikes were curtailed.

    Justice Clarence Thomas dissented, saying he would have respected the decisions of state judges who sided with prosecutors and rejected Foster’s claims. Thomas, a Georgia native, recounted Foster’s confession to having murdered a 79-year-old retired schoolteacher “after having sexually assaulted her with a bottle of salad dressing.”

    When the case was argued in November, the justices did little to hide their distaste for the tactics employed by prosecutors in north Georgia. Justice Elena Kagan said the case seemed as clear a violation “as a court is ever going to see.”

    Still, Georgia courts had consistently rejected Foster’s claims of discrimination, even after his lawyers obtained prosecutors’ notes that revealed their focus on the black people in the jury pool. In one example, a handwritten note headed “Definite No’s” listed six people, of whom five were the remaining black prospective jurors.

    The sixth person on the list was a white woman who made clear she would never impose the death penalty, according to Bright. And yet even that woman ranked behind the black jurors, he said.

    The court was not persuaded by the state’s argument that the notes focused on black people in the jury pool because prosecutors were preparing to defend against discrimination claims.

    The Supreme Court’s ruling about race discrimination in jury selection was about a year old when Foster’s case went to trial, the state said. The 1986 decision in Batson v. Kentucky set up a system by which trial judges could evaluate claims of discrimination and the explanations by prosecutors that their actions were not based on race.

    “This argument falls flat,” Roberts wrote. He noted that the record shows “a concerted effort to keep black prospective jurors off the jury.”

    Georgia Attorney General Sam Olens declined to comment on the decision.

    Foster’s trial lawyers did not so much contest his guilt as try to explain it as a product of a troubled childhood, drug abuse and mental illness. They also raised objections about the exclusion of African-Americans from the jury. On that point, the judge accepted prosecutor Stephen Lanier’s explanations that factors other than race drove his decisions. The jury convicted Foster and sentenced him to death.

    The jury issue was revived 19 years later, in 2006, when the state turned over the prosecution’s notes in response to a request under Georgia’s Open Records Act.

    The name of each potential black juror was highlighted on four different copies of the jury list and the word “black” was circled next to the race question on questionnaires for the black prospective jurors. Three of the prospective black jurors were identified in notes as “B#1,” ”B#2,” and “B#3.”

    An investigator working for the prosecutors also ranked the black prospective jurors against each other in case “it comes down to having to pick one of the black jurors.”

    Roberts noted that Lanier’s reasons for excusing people from the jury changed over time. The chief justice also focused on an apparent different standard for prospective white and black jurors. One African-American man was excused in part because his wife worked at a local hospital, Roberts said. “But Lanier expressed no such concerns about white juror Blackmon, who had worked at the same hospital” and served on the jury, Roberts said.

    Thomas objected to his colleagues’ late intervention. “Foster’s new evidence does not justify this court’s reassessment of who was telling the truth nearly three decades removed from voir dire,” Thomas wrote, using the term for jury selection.

    Foster’s case is the rare instance in which the prosecutors’ files contained clear evidence of racial discrimination, Bright said. Still, he said, “Courts should know it might be there and be more vigilant in finding it.”

    The case is Foster v. Chatman, 14-8349.

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  15. A man fishing along the Gulf Coast got a boatload of a surprise recently — and it almost cost him his leg.

    George Saber, from Plano, Texas, was fishing in Corpus Christie, Texas, May 15 when he hooked a three-foot Atlantic sharp-nose shark. Saber reeled in the small carnivore, planning to remove the hook from its mouth and release it back into the water.

    Image source: YouTube

    Image source: YouTube

    “He obviously wasn’t a monster shark, so I figured I’d bring him on board, get the hook out and get some cool pictures,” Saber said, Fox News reported. “He turned around, turned towards me and started thrashing.”

    That when “things got pretty intense.”

    The shark started flopping around in the kayak as Saber maneuvered his body — mostly his feet — away from its mouth.

    “All I was thinking was ‘get my feet out of the way’ when the shark was nipping at my feet,” Saber said. “It got closer and closer to my groin. She picked up her energy again, and it turned into a dance off.”

    Moments later, the shark flopped its way back into the water. But even after nearly being bitten by a shark, Saber still didn’t call it a day.

    He reeled in the shark for a second time, but unlike the first time, he managed to remove the hook from its mouth and release it back into the water.

    Watch the horrifying encounter below:

    — 

    Follow the author of this story on Twitter and Facebook:

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  16. images?q=tbn:ANd9GcSKvk8QYN9yJwuNVJbuLwl
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  17. images?q=tbn:ANd9GcSz5J_iVlPKTJRQQUbF-Qi
    ESPN

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  18. images?q=tbn:ANd9GcSUh7ik5g3xII54Skhf-rh
    The Sun

    Funniest Golf Photos of the Week: Byron Nelson and Irish Open
    Golf.com
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