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TheWorldNewsOrg

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  1. images?q=tbn:ANd9GcTTngmLtiKuLdmaIGO-RYa
    The Boston Globe

    Governor's mother dies after long illness
    The Boston Globe
    Elizabeth G. “Betty” Baker, the mother of Governor Charlie Baker, died Saturday at a facility in Needham after a long illness, according to a spokesman for the governor's office. She was 83. Baker, born on December 24, 1932 in Rochester, Minn., was the ...
    Gov. Baker's mother dies at age 83Minneapolis Star Tribune
    Betty Baker, governor's mother, diesBoston Herald
    Massachusetts Senate to debate $39.5B state budget planClay Center Dispatch
    MassLive.com -wwlp.com -Patch.com -CBS Local
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    Google

  2. images?q=tbn:ANd9GcTXkI24RvLiCpKPKaYnG8H
    CNN

    Report: Prince might have been dead for hours before found
    CNN
    Chanhassen, Minnesota (CNN) One day before his body was found, Prince was given intravenous fluids at a Minneapolis area hospital, according to the Minneapolis Star Tribune, which attributed that information to an unnamed source with knowledge of the ...
    Prince May Have Been Dead for Hours Before Body Was Found: SourceABC News
    Prince might have died hours before he was foundAOL News
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    People Magazine -KOMO News -WLS-TV -PerezHilton.com
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  3. images?q=tbn:ANd9GcRnhO2zAB_RDSN0aLg16LJ
    SB Nation

    Red Bulls destroy NYCFC, 7-0, cementing the Hudson River Derby's contrived status
    SB Nation
    Coming into Saturday's match between New York City FC and the New York Red Bulls, their Hudson River Derby was hyped by MLS and broadcast partner Fox as among the biggest in North America, on par with the Cascadia Derbies of the Pacific Northwest ...
    New York City FC 0 New York Red Bulls 7BBC News
    Red Bulls Demolish New York City in What Has Been a One-Sided RivalryNew York Times
    Red Bulls embarrass NYCFC, 7-0, in Hudson River DerbyNew York Daily News
    New York Post -Salt Lake Tribune -Empire Of Soccer -NJ.com
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  4. NORTHERN SYRIA (AP) — The top U.S. commander for the Middle East secretly visited Syria on Saturday for a first-hand look at efforts to build cohesive alliances of Arab, Kurd and other local fighters to defeat the Islamic State.

    Army Gen. Joseph Votel speaks to reporters Saturday, May 21, 2016 during a secret trip to Syria. Votel said he is encouraged by progress in building local Syrian Arab and Kurdish forces to fight the Islamic State. (AP Photo/Robert Burns)

    Army Gen. Joseph Votel speaks to reporters Saturday, May 21, 2016 during a secret trip to Syria. Votel said he is encouraged by progress in building local Syrian Arab and Kurdish forces to fight the Islamic State. (AP Photo/Robert Burns)

    Army Gen. Joseph Votel, who is head of U.S. Central Command, became the highest-ranking U.S. military officer known to have entered Syria since the U.S. began its campaign to counter the Islamic State in 2014.

    Votel flew into northern Syria and spent nearly 11 hours in the country. He met with U.S. military advisers working with Syrian Arab fighters, and conferred with leaders of the Syrian Democratic Forces, an umbrella group of Kurdish and Arab fighters supported by the U.S.

    A small group of reporters accompanied Votel on a flight from Iraq under ground rules that, for security reasons, prohibited disclosing his visit until after he had left Syria.

    Votel landed at a dusty outpost, surrounded by wheat fields, that serves as a U.S. camp for American military advisers who are training Syrian Arab troops in basic soldiering skills. Splitting off from the reporters who flew in with him, Votel then visited several other undisclosed locations in Syria before returning to the camp.

    Aides said Votel’s flight into Syria was the first made in daylight by U.S. forces, who have about 200 advisers on the ground but no combat units. Military ground rules for the trip prohibited reporting the kind of aircraft Votel used, the exact location of where he landed and the names and images of the U.S. military advisers, who said they have been operating from the camp since January.

    An Associated Press reporter and journalists from two other news organizations were the first Western media to visit the secretive operation.

    In an interview as dusk fell and he prepared to fly out of Syria, Votel said his visit had hardened his belief that the U.S. is taking the right approach to developing local forces to fight IS, an acronym for the Islamic State.

    “I left with increased confidence in their capabilities and our ability to support them,” he said. “I think that model is working and working well.”

    The U.S. has struggled to find an effective ground force to take on IS in Syria, where President Barack Obama has ruled out a U.S. ground combat role. This presents a different problem than in Iraq, where the U.S. at least has a government to partner with.

    The problem in Syria is complicated by the fractured nature of the opposition to the government of President Bashar al-Assad. The U.S. Is trying to develop credible Arab fighters to retake Raqqa, the Islamic State’s self-declared capital, while Syrian Kurds have retaken territory from IS in other parts of northern Syria.

    The U.S. is supporting what it calls the Syrian Democratic Forces, which is predominantly comprised of Syrian Kurds, numbering at least 25,000 fighters, with a smaller element of Syrian Arabs, numbering perhaps 5,000 to 6,000. The U.S. is trying to increase the Arab numbers.

    Members of the Syrian army patrol the ancient Syrian city of Palmyra on May 6, 2016, during a patriotic celebration put on by the Syrian regime at the UNESCO world heritage site, with flag-waving and military music in a place where just last year jihadists carried out mass executions. Syrian troops backed by Russian air strikes and special forces on the ground recaptured the UNESCO world heritage site from Islamic State group fighters in March. (Photo: LOUAI BESHARA/AFP/Getty Images)

    Members of the Syrian army patrol the ancient Syrian city of Palmyra on May 6, 2016, during a patriotic celebration put on by the Syrian regime at the UNESCO world heritage site, with flag-waving and military music in a place where just last year jihadists carried out mass executions. Syrian troops backed by Russian air strikes and special forces on the ground recaptured the UNESCO world heritage site from Islamic State group fighters in March. (Photo: LOUAI BESHARA/AFP/Getty Images)

    The last known high-level U.S. official to visit Syria was Brett McGurk, Obama’s envoy to the coalition fighting the Islamic State. He spent two days in Syria in late January, including a tour of Kobani, the small town near the Turkish border where Kurdish fighters backed by U.S. airstrikes had expelled an entrenched group of Islamic State fighters a year earlier.

    Votel’s predecessor, Gen. Lloyd Austin, who was leading Central Command when the U.S. kicked off airstrikes in Syria in September 2014, never visited the country. Votel’s decision to go reflects his emphasis on getting an up-close look at all aspects of the counter-IS campaign early in his tenure.

    Syrian Arab commanders who were made available for interviews at the U.S. camp Saturday said their forces are gaining battlefield momentum but also need a lot more help. They were quick to say the U.S.-led coalition should pitch in more.

    Qarhaman Hasan, the deputy commander of the Syrian Democratic Forces, said he has given the Americans a list of his most pressing needs. Atop his list: armored vehicles, heavy weapons like machine guns, as well as rocket launchers and mortars.

    “We’re creating an army,” he said through an interpreter, and have had to rely on smuggling to get weapons.

    “You can’t run an army on smuggling,” he said.

    Tribal leaders said in interviews that they also want to see the U.S. do more, both militarily and with humanitarian aid.

    “America has the capabilities,” said Sheik Abu Khalid as he puffed on a cigarette under the shade of pomegranate and pine trees.

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  5. An online gamer apparently forgot to turn off his microphone after livestreaming himself playing NBA 2K16 on PlayStation 4 — and the terrifying audio captured has sparked a police investigation.

    Joe Ortega, known online as JoeDaddy505, is allegedly heard shouting and cursing at a crying woman during an argument. At one point, the woman even begged the man to get off of her, which spurred sexual assault allegations.

    The victim also threatened to call the cops, to which the man responded, “You straight s**t. No one’s gonna f***ing watch you,” a man’s voice is heard saying.

    “You’re a w***e,” the man said. “You’re a straight f***ing w***e. One hundred per cent w***e. A f***ing w***e.”

    Watch KRQE-TV’s report below:

    Responding to the claims against him, Ortega seemingly defended himself in an Instagram post, though it’s not clear if someone else may have hacked the account. From the Daily Mail:

    The post, which has since been deleted, may not have been made by him as all of his social media accounts have been hacked.

    It read: ‘You guys have it all twisted up. I’m getting so much hate right now. Literally am getting 30 DMs after and after I got drunk yes I know I did my father recently passed away [sic].

    ‘And we had an argument couple days ago and she brought it back up on stream so I might have got upset.

    ‘NO I did not rape her. I hit her and fell on top of her and hit her again. I know I shouldn’t have done that. It’s a f**ked up move I made. I’m sorry.

    The disturbing audio went viral after being posted by the “Drama Alert” podcast. It wasn’t long before police opened an investigation.

    However, Valencia County deputies told KRQE-TV that the audio isn’t enough to charge Ortega and they need a victim to step forward.

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  6. WASHINGTON (AP) — The Pentagon has announced that the U.S. has conducted an airstrike targeting Taliban leader Mullah Mansour. One American official says the U.S. believes Mansour was killed in a drone strike authorized by President Barack Obama.

    Pentagon press secretary Peter Cook said the attack occurred in a remote region along the Afghanistan-Pakistan border. He said the U.S. was still studying the results of the attack, leaving Mansour’s fate unclear.

    But a U.S. official who wasn’t authorized to publicly discuss the operation said Mansour and a second male combatant accompanying him in a vehicle were likely killed.

    The official said the attack was carried out by unmanned aircraft operated by U.S. Special Operations Forces. The official said the operation occurred at about 6 a.m. EDT southwest of the town of Ahmad Wal.

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  7. A progressive blogger was fired from his job Friday after criticizing some of Democratic presidential front-runner Hillary Clinton’s most influential supporters, calling one of them a “scumbag.”

    It all began when blogger Matt Bruenig, who wrote about philosophy and political economy for Demos, came after the progressive think tank, Demos, got into a Twitter dispute with writer Joan Walsh over a piece she wrote for the Nation titled, “Bernie Sanders is hurting himself by playing the victim.”

    Walsh tweeted that she rejects “the moral superiority of a coalition led by white men vs. the will of black, brown and female voters” with a link to her article.

    Bruenig responded to the tweet, claiming that the tension diving the Democratic Party is “really about old people versus young people.” He also accused Walsh of harboring “animus towards young people. It’s kind of disgusting.”

    President of the Center for American Progress, Neera Tanden eventually chimed in. By that time, the conversation had moved on to welfare reform.

    Bruenig accused Tanden of trying “to starve me and my mother because she wanted to be in Democratic politics,” saying that Tanden supported welfare reform in the 1990s, when Bill Clinton was still president.

    Bruenig was never one to hide his critiques of Hillary Clinton. In the past, he called the former secretary of State “an enemy of the poor” and “a garbage rich person.”

    Tanden shot back at Bruenig, tweeting that “having been on welfare myself, don’t need lectures on this topic from you.”

    Bruenig, clearly unmoved, tweeted, “Scumbag Neera uses welfare when she needs it then takes away from others when they need it. Disgusting.”

    Tanden responded that she “never worked on welfare reform,” and denied that she ever supported cutting from the program.

    Demos responded to the Twitter thread Friday, calling Bruenig’s tweets “unacceptable,” and apologizing on his behalf.

    Then, later Friday evening, Demos released a statement explaining how it differs with the up-and-coming blogger.

    The statement also addresses the hostile state of the Democratic Party, saying “it has been a particularly challenging place for progressives on opposite sides during the Democratic primary, and we know that there is a Sanders versus Clinton overlay to the Twitter exchange on Thursday night.”

    After he was fired, Bruenig set up a GoFundMe page for “The Bruenig Bailout,” which raised nearly $25,000 in less than 24 hours.

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  8. images?q=tbn:ANd9GcSF1FEMbBwuGYv0KljQSTO
    New York Times

    How a Push to Advance Bathroom Rights for Transgender Americans Reached the White House
    New York Times
    Destin Cramer, left, and Noah Rice placing a sign on the door of a bathroom that was designated as gender neutral last week at Nathan Hale High School in Seattle. Credit Elaine Thompson/Associated Press. The people of Palatine, Ill., a middle-class ...
    Bathrooms and respectNew York Daily News
    EDITORIAL: Transgender directive necessary interventionAsbury Park Press
    Toiletarianism — Safe Spaces FlushedTown Hall
    Bloomington Pantagraph -Daily Caller -Christian Science Monitor -PinkNews
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  9. WEST POINT, N.Y. (TheBlaze/AP) — Vice President Joe Biden told the U.S. Military Academy’s class of 2016 on Saturday that greater diversity, including more women and openly gay soldiers, will strengthen the country’s armed forces.

    “Having men and women together in the battlefield is an incredible asset, particularly when they’re asked to lead teams in parts of the world with fundamentally different expectations and norms,” Biden said in his speech at a graduation ceremony at Michie Stadium on the West Point grounds along the Hudson River.

    Oszan Kose/AFP/Getty Images

    Oszan Kose/AFP/Getty Images

    More than 950 cadets received their degrees and commissions as second lieutenants. Among them were the first seven women to be commissioned into combat divisions since combat restrictions for them were lifted.

    The vice president saluted class president Eugene “E.J.” Coleman for publicly coming out as gay.

    Before the repeal of the military’s “don’t ask, don’t tell” policy in 2010, “E.J. would have been discharged from the Army, and we would have lost an incredible talent,” he said. “Thanks for your courage, E.J., and I expect we’re going to hear big things from you, pal.”

    Biden also warned the graduating class that it’s facing a vast range of complex challenges, including battling Islamic State extremists, containing outbreaks of contagious diseases and defending against cyberattacks.

    “Whenever the stakes are highest, we turn to the United States Army,” he said. “Whether it’s fighting terrorism, training our partners, reassuring our allies or providing humanitarian relief, we call on you,” he said. “And right now, the stakes could not be higher.”

    Biden singled out cyberattacks as a growing threat that could allow American enemies to knock out the nation’s power grid or disable satellite systems.

    “The bad thing about advanced technology is that it gives immense powers to stateless actors,” Biden said.

    He added: “You’ll need to dominate the cyber realm as you do the physical one.”

    Biden also was West Point’s commencement speaker in 2012.

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  10. A grieving mother is speaking out after her young daughter died suddenly at her Alabama school this week while playing tug-of-war.

    Leslie Wentworth told Fox News Saturday that she was at work Thursday when the school called and said her 13-year-old daughter may have suffered a seizure.

    Sixth-grader Maddison Wentworth collapsed while playing with other students during an end-of-the-year Field Day event at Williams Intermediate School in Pell City, authorities told Fox.

    Image source: GoFundMe

    Image source: GoFundMe

    “I’m pulling my strength from God,” Laslie Wentworth said Saturday. “The love I’ve received from the community has just been overwhelming.”

    Wentworth described Maddison as full of life. She also said she’d “never met a stranger.”

    Maddison’s death was a complete shock. Wentworth said her daughter had no known health problems that she knew of.

    After the 13-year-old collapsed, school nurses performed CPR until paramedics arrived. Maddison was taken to a local hospital where she was pronounced dead at at 12:34 p.m., Pell City Police Sgt. Don Newton told AL.com.

    According to a GoFundMe account created by a family friend to “help with the financial side of this horrific time,” the cause of Maddison’s death is still unknown. An autopsy was scheduled to determine how the young girl died, AL.com reported.

    “We have suffered a great loss at Williams Intermediate School. Field day is supposed to be one of the best days of the year,” Pell City Schools Superintendent Michael Barber said in a statement. “Our thoughts and prayers are with the family, and with the faculty and students who knew her and loved her every day. And I would ask everyone to keep this family and the system in their prayers as well.”

    Classmates wrote notes to Maddison during school Friday and put them in her locker, WBRC-TV reported. The notes will eventually be given to her mother, according to the station.

    The school also plans to hold a “celebration of life” event in honor of Maddison on the last day of school next week.

    As of Saturday, more than $10,700 had been raised to help Maddison’s family.

    “Words can not express how much each and every one of you are appreciated,” an update posted to the site at around 2:15 p.m. Saturday read. “Thank you all so much for your kind words and donations. All of this love and support is truly amazing, God bless you all!”

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