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Ultramarathon runner breastfeeds her baby 3 times on her way to a surprise win

Stephanie Case won an ultramarathon race in Wales, running more than 60 miles over rough terrain — and stopping three times to breastfeed her 6-month-old baby, Pepper.

The extreme sport of ultrarunning is known for seemingly impossible feats. But Stephanie Case's recent performance — six months after giving birth — is making waves far beyond the running community.

(Image credit: Rich Gill)

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Here's the science behind the COVID vaccine in pregnancy

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Existing evidence on the safety and efficacy of getting a COVID vaccine in pregnancy all points the same way: the shot is important for maternal and fetal health.

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Food for Gaza decays in Jordan warehouses as Israel restricts aid

Displaced Palestinians, including women and children living in tents, receive food distributed by aid organizations in al-Mawasi district of Khan Younis, Gaza, on May 30. In Jordan, tens of thousands of boxes of food aid for Gaza are moldering in warehouses.

Food aid is moldering in warehouses in Jordan, the main hub for humanitarian aid to Gaza. Other foods and medicines are loaded on trucks that have waited for months at Israeli border crossings.

(Image credit: Abed Rahim)

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PBS and Minnesota public TV station sue Trump White House

President Trump issued an executive order directing the Corporation for Public Broadcasting and public television stations to withhold funds from PBS. On Friday, PBS — led by Paula Kerger (right) — and Lakeland PBS of Minnesota sued.

PBS and Lakeland PBS in rural Minnesota are suing President Trump over his executive order demanding that the Corporation for Public Broadcasting kill all funding for the public television network.

(Image credit: Andrew Harnik/Getty Images, Nathan Posner/Anadolu via Getty Images)

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Remembering a Ballet Legend in Russia; a Monkey Census in Nepal

Russians remember the longtime artistic director of the Bolshoi Ballet, who died recently. Yuri Grigorovich held the position for the last three decades of the Soviet Union and staged productions that were wildly popular at home and projected soft power overseas.

And in Nepal, people have complained of monkey's stealing food from their property for years. Now, the government is holding its first-ever monkey census to understand exactly how bad the problem is.

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Trump nominates official with ties to antisemitic extremists to lead ethics agency

Paul Ingrassia, who is currently serving as the White House liaison to the Department of Homeland Security, has been nominated to the lead the U.S. Office of Special Counsel.

President Trump nominated Paul Ingrassia to lead the Office of Special Counsel, a government agency that enforces ethics law and protects whistleblowers, despite Ingrassia's links to extremists.

(Image credit: Tia Dufour)

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Billowing smoke from Canadian wildfires wafts into the U.S.

Clouds of wildfire smoke like this one in Flin Flon, Manitoba, are wafting into the Northern Plains and Midwest.

The Manitoba wildfires have forced 17,000 people to flee the province. Plumes of heavy smoke are expected to drift into the United States over Friday and Saturday, affecting millions of Americans.

(Image credit: Government of Manitoba)

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Former Sinn Fein leader Gerry Adams wins libel case against BBC over spy murder claim

Former Sinn Fein leader Gerry Adams leaves the court in Dublin on Friday after winning one of Ireland

Adams sued over an allegation in a 2016 documentary that he sanctioned the 2006 killing of a British spy in Ireland. A jury in Dublin's High Court awarded Adams damages of 100,000 euros ($113,000).

(Image credit: Charles McQuillan)

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French health ministry extends smoking ban

A man smokes a cigarette outside a brasserie, in front of a sticker on a window reading: "Smoking is forbidden."

France to ban smoking at beaches, parks and outside schools from July 1st to protect children

(Image credit: JACQUES BRINON)

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Supreme Court allows Trump administration to end humanitarian status for some migrants

The U.S. Supreme Court

The move to grant a stay in the case means that the Cubans, Haitian, Nicaraguans and Venezuelans who were granted temporary parole under the program known as CHNV would lose their temporary legal status to be in the U.S.

(Image credit: Drew Angerer)

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Russell Brand pleads not guilty to rape, sexual assault charges in U.K.

Russell Brand arrives at Southwark Crown Court on Friday in London.

On Friday, Brand pleaded not guilty to five counts of rape and assault that date back more than 25 years. He says the charges are politically motivated. His trial is set for 2026.

(Image credit: Jeff Spicer)

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Can this nasal spray slow down Alzheimer's? One couple is helping scientists find out

Joe Walsh, who has Alzheimer

Joe Walsh is the first Alzheimer's patient to be treated with an experimental nasal spray designed to reduce inflammation in the brain.

(Image credit: Jodi Hilton)

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Trump to celebrate US Steel-Nippon Steel deal in PA even as the details remain murky

President Trump will travel to Pennsylvania on Friday to celebrate a deal he brokered between US Steel and the Japanese company U.S. Steel, even as the details of what the agreement actually entails have yet to be released.

President Trump travels to Pittsburgh Friday to celebrate a deal between U.S. Steel and the Japanese company Nippon Steel — a deal he helped broker after campaigning that he would block it.

(Image credit: DOMINIC GWINN)

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Trump to celebrate U.S. Steel deal with Japan. And, what's next for DOGE

The logo of Japan

President Trump is heading to Pittsburgh today to celebrate U.S. Steel and Nippon Steel's partnership. And, what's next for DOGE after Elon Musk's exit.

(Image credit: Kazuhiro Nogi)

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Oil companies face a wrongful death suit tied to climate change

The sun begins to set beyond an oil refinery in California.

Julie Leon died of hyperthermia in Seattle on June 28, 2021 — the hottest day in the city's history. A lawsuit claims she was a victim of oil companies' "misrepresentations" about climate change.

(Image credit: Mario Tama/Getty Images)

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Are you smarter than a 13-year-old? Take our Scripps Spelling Bee test and find out

Faizan Zaki won the 2025 Scripps National Spelling Bee, held in National Harbor, Md.

If you weren't playing along at home during Thursday night's final, take our mini-Bee quiz, which uses words from the real thing.

(Image credit: Kayla Bartkowski)

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A 30-year Dungeons & Dragons game gets upended by politics

For more than 30 years, a group of friends gathered each week to play Dungeons & Dragons — until politics broke up their game in 2020. Two players talked about it with StoryCorps.

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Will I get refunds? Small businesses wonder as courts rule on Trump tariffs

A federal court blocked President Trump

Court rulings against President Trump's tariffs could spell relief for many American importers — if the decisions hold. For now, the uncertainty remains.

(Image credit: Jim Watson)

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Elon Musk is leaving the federal government. What's next for DOGE?

Elon Musk listens during a bilateral meeting between President Trump and South Africa President Cyril Ramaphosa at the White House on May 21, 2025. Musk announced this week that he was leaving the Trump administration and returning to focus on his businesses.

Elon Musk is leaving the Department of Government Efficiency effort. His 130 day tenure was marked by legal setbacks, overstated savings claims and little evidence DOGE made things more efficient.

(Image credit: Chip Somodevilla)

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AI-enabled "vibe coding" lets anyone write software

A screenshot of the website for Chloe Samaha

You no longer need to be a software engineer to build software — you can "vibe code" it by prompting chatbots to build apps and websites. Could that put programmers out of a job?

(Image credit: bondapp.io)

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Which Biden-era case is the FBI NOT reexamining? Find out in the quiz

From left: Julie Chrisley, Kermit the Frog, Brigitte Macron.

This week, vaccines took a hit from the Trump administration, some reality TV stars got pardoned, and there was a media frenzy around a certain French interaction. Were you paying attention?

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Google and the DOJ wrap up a historic tech monopoly case: What to know

A woman walks past a Google logo at the Google Campus in Warsaw on Feb.13, 2025.

The Justice Department and Google have one final chance to convince a federal judge how the tech giant should change its practices so it can no longer monopolize the search market.

(Image credit: SERGEI GAPON)

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Federal workers keep America's farms healthy. What now under Trump?

Cows are milked at the Cornell Teaching Dairy Barn at Cornell University on Dec. 11, 2024, in Ithaca, N.Y., shortly after the U.S. Department of Agriculture issued a federal order requiring testing of the nation

More than a thousand people who worked to keep American agriculture free of pests and disease have left the federal workforce in President Trump's massive government downsizing.

(Image credit: Michael M. Santiago)

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After 529 days alone in the Australian bush, Valerie the mini dachshund is home

Valerie the mini dachshund, at home in mid-May.

Valerie ran off while she was on a camping trip with her owners back in 2023 on a remote island in Australia. They had lost hope until locals spotted her more than a year later, surviving in the wild.

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Bernard Kerik, who led NYPD on 9/11 before prison and pardon, has died at 69

Former New York City police Commissioner Bernard Kerik is shown standing outside the Federal Court in Washington, June 4, 2009.

Kerik, an Army veteran, was hailed as a hero after the 9/11 attack and eventually nominated to head the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, before a dramatic fall from grace that ended with him behind bars.

(Image credit: Manuel Balce Ceneta)

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Argentine court declares a mistrial in the death of soccer star Maradona

Judge Julieta Makintach arrives at court for a hearing in the trial of health professionals accused of negligence in the death of soccer star Diego Maradona, in San Isidro, on the outskirts of Buenos Aires, Argentina, Tuesday, May 27, 2025.

One of the judges stepped down over criticism surrounding her participation in a documentary about the case. Seven health professionals are accused of negligence in the death of the soccer legend.

(Image credit: Gustavo Garello)

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White House acknowledges problems in RFK Jr.'s 'Make America Healthy Again' report

Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. speaks as Education Secretary Linda McMahon listens during a Make America Healthy Again (MAHA) Commission Event in the East Room of the White House, Thursday, May 22, 2025, in Washington.

HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.'s "Make America Healthy Again" report cited hundreds of studies, but a closer look by the news organization NOTUS found that some of those studies did not exist.

(Image credit: Jacquelyn Martin)

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As the Scripps spelling bee turns 100, former champions reflect on its evolution

Balu Natarajan won the Scripps National Spelling Bee in 1985. Shown are his trophy and newspaper clippings detailing his win.

Previous winners say the spelling bee has become much more competitive and credit television with making it a cultural phenomenon each year.

(Image credit: PS Photography)

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Supreme Court limits environmental reviews of infrastructure projects

The Supreme Court narrowed the scope of environmental reviews for major infrastructure projects.

The decision makes it easier to win approval for highways, bridges, pipelines, wind farms, and other infrastructure projects.

(Image credit: Drew Angerer)

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The White House is sued over lack of sign language interpreters at press briefings

White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt speaks during the daily briefing on Thursday. The National Association of the Deaf is suing the White House to require American Sign Language interpreters to be present at briefings.

The National Association of the Deaf says the White House's failure to provide ASL interpreters during press briefings leaves some deaf and hard of hearing people without information.

(Image credit: Jim Watson)

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