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Minggu, 27 Juli 2025

Murder of Etan Patz, one of the first missing children on milk cartons, raises questions about confession after reversal

The man imprisoned for kidnapping and murdering a six-year-old boy in New York City Nearly 45 years ago, his conviction was overturned.

64-year-old Pedro Hernandez has been serving a 25-years-to-life sentence in prison after being convicted in 2017. of killing Etan Patz in 1979.

Patz vanished on the first day he was allowed to walk to the school bus stop by himself on May 25, 1979. He was one of the first missing children to be pictured on milk cartons in a case that drew national attention.

President Ronald Reagan later declared May 25, 1983, the first National Day for Missing Children in memory of Patz.

COURT OVERTURNS CONVICTION, ORDERS NEW TRIAL OF MAN CONVICTED IN 1979 ETAN PATZ MURDER

On the morning of May 25, 1979, the first-grader was granted permission from his parents to walk alone to the bus stop, located just a block and a half away from where the family lived. His mother took him downstairs and watched him walk into the distance – he was never seen again.

READ ON THE FOX NEWS APP

At the time of Patz's disappearance , Hernandez was working at a convenience store as a teenager in the child's downtown Manhattan neighborhood. He initially spoke with authorities as they were canvassing for the child, but he did not become a suspect until police received a 2012 tip revealing that Hernandez had previously made remarks about killing a child in New York, but had not mentioned Patz by name.

Hernandez was arrested in 2012 and ultimately confessed to the crime after seven hours of questioning, telling investigators he had lured Patz into the store's basement with the promise of giving him a soda. Once inside, Hernandez said he had choked the child because "something just took over me," before putting Patz – who Hernandez said was still alive – inside a box and leaving it alongside a pile of trash.

MENENDEZ BROTHERS COUNT ON NEW TRIAL AS BACKUP IF PAROLE APPLICATION FAILS

However, Hernandez's lawyers insisted the confession was the result of a mental illness that caused their client to misinterpret his imagination as reality. The attorneys also pointed to Hernandez's very low IQ.

Several factors likely contributed to his confession, including low IQ, mental illness, and heightened suggestibility," Jonathan Alpert, a psychotherapist and author of "Therapy Nation," told Fox News Digital. "These make someone more prone to internalizing guilt or fabricating details to meet perceived expectations.

Alpert has not treated any of the individuals involved in the case.

MENENDEZ BROTHERS SCORE CRUCIAL LEGAL VICTORY IN DECADES-LONG FIGHT AS THEY AWAIT POTENTIAL FREEDOM

Hernandez was initially tried in New York state court twice - with the first trial ending in a jury deadlock in 2015 - before an appeal transferred the case into federal court.

At the time, prosecutors claimed that Hernandez was faking or exaggerating his illness , pointing to Hernandez reportedly admitting to the crimes before police read him his rights and began recording their interview in 2012. He went on to repeat his confession at least twice while being recorded.

The confession ultimately led to questions from jurors during their nine days of deliberations, with their final inquiry revolving around whether they were required to rule out the two recorded confessions if they were to determine that the first one was invalid – with the judge telling them they were not.

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Later, an appeals court ruled that the judge should have provided a better explanation to the jury regarding their options, which could have included not taking into account all three of Hernandez's confessions.

Referring to a jury note during the trial, the appeals court said the judge had provided a "clearly wrong" and "manifestly prejudicial" response to the question posed.

The court's decision to overturn Hernandez's conviction and grant him a new trial raises questions regarding mental health and confessions in court cases, as Alpert points out the frequent susceptibility of individuals with mental health disorders to "have an intense need to gain approval from authority figures."

SCOTT PETERSON'S 'STRONGEST ARGUMENT' FOR MURDER CONVICTION APPEAL IS A LONG SHOT: CRIMINAL DEFENSE LAWYER

"When interrogators suggest a narrative, these individuals can absorb and repeat it, not out of deceit, but out of compliance. Over time, they may even start to believe it themselves, especially when under stress or exhaustion."

While a new trial could bring additional clarity for a case that has spanned decades, Alpert warns that it could also lead to misunderstandings regarding testimony and evidence years later.

"A retrial has the potential to bring clarity, especially if new psychological insights or evidence are introduced," Alpert told Fox News Digital. "But it could just as easily create more confusion, particularly if the case continues to rely heavily on interpretation rather than hard facts."

GET REAL-TIME UPDATES DIRECTLY ON THE TRUE CRIME HUB

The case attracted national attention, with Patz's photo being one of the first to be circulated on milk cartons throughout the country. His parents lived in the same home and used the same phone number for decades, in hopes their son would eventually return to them.

The child's family worked to help establish a national missing-children hotline and pioneered a new way for law enforcement agencies throughout the country to distribute information regarding such cases.

"They waited and persevered for 35 years for justice for Etan, which today, sadly, may have been lost," said former Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance Jr. to The Associated Press after learning about the reversal.

The court ordered Hernandez's release unless he receives a new trial within "a reasonable time period."

For more than 13 years, Pedro Hernandez has been in prison for a crime he did not commit and based on a conviction that the Second Circuit has now made clear was obtained in clear violation of law," said Hernandez's lawyer, Harvey Fishbein, in a statement to Fox News Digital. "We are grateful the Court has now given Pedro a chance to get his life back, and we call upon the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office to drop these misguided charges and focus their efforts where they belong – on finding those actually responsible for the disappearance of Etan Patz.

The Manhattan District Attorney's Office did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital's request for comment.

"This case highlights a broader issue in the legal system," Alpert said. "Confessions are not always reliable. Mental illness, coercion or desperation can all lead someone to admit guilt falsely. Without physical evidence to support a confession, courts must proceed with extreme caution. Understanding the psychology behind a confession is essential before treating it as fact."

Original article source: Murder of Etan Patz, one of the first missing children on milk cartons, raises questions about confession after reversal

Gaza ceasefire must be secured, PM to tell Trump amid stalled negotiations

Sir Keir Starmer is expected to question Donald Trump on the revival of ceasefire talks between Israel and Hamas as the UK joins efforts to airdrop aid into Gaza.

The Prime Minister will travel to meet the US president during his visit to Scotland amid growing global anger over the humanitarian conditions in the war-torn enclave.

Ceasefire talks in Qatar have come to a standstill this week after the U.S. and Israel withdrew their negotiation teams from the country, with U.S. special envoy Steve Witkoff accusing Hamas of a "lack of desire" to reach an agreement.

The deal under discussion was expected to include a 60-day ceasefire, and aid supplies would be increased as conditions for a lasting truce were negotiated.

It is understood that Sir Keir will raise Washington's work with partners in Qatar and Egypt during his talks with Mr. Trump and seek to discuss what more can be done to urgently bring about a ceasefire.

They will also discuss the recently agreed US-UK trade deal and the war in Ukraine.

Britain is working with Jordan to airdrop aid into Gaza and evacuate children requiring medical assistance, with military planners deployed for further support.

However, the head of the UN's Palestinian refugee agency has warned that such efforts are "a distraction" that will fail to properly address the deepening starvation in the strip, and could harm civilians in some cases.

UNRWA chief Philippe Lazzarini said: "Man-made hunger can only be addressed by political will."

Lift the siege, open the gates and guarantee safe movements and dignified access to people in need.

Israel has now said it will pause fighting in three populated areas of Gaza and establish humanitarian corridors to enable UN convoys to transport aid to desperate Palestinians, as well as allowing airdrops.

In a statement, the country's military said it would enable "safe movement of deliveries of food and medicine" but that it "emphasizes that combat operations have not ceased".

The Israel Defence Forces (IDF) also stated that there was "no starvation" in Gaza, despite increasing reports of malnutrition and deaths related to starvation.

Speaking to broadcasters on Sunday, Exchequer Secretary to the Treasury James Murray acknowledged that airdrops come with "real limits and drawbacks," but that the situation was "desperate and urgent."

"Until the restrictions are lifted, until aid is able to get in at the scale and quantity that is needed, we need to be doing everything we possibly can to help," he told Sky News' Sunday Morning With Trevor Phillips show.

He declined to say whether he was confident that Israel's promise to allow UN convoys to reach Gaza would help feed its population.

"Let's see what happens with that," the minister said.

What we are not going to lose sight of is the importance of lifting restrictions on aid getting in so that it can get in at the quantity that is needed to make sure that we can move things forward.

Sir Keir will chair a Cabinet meeting next week and is expected to present a UK peace plan to allies, with Foreign Secretary David Lammy due to attend a UN conference on a two-state solution in New York in the coming days.

He also held talks with French and German counterparts on Saturday, during which Number 10 said they agreed "it would be vital to ensure robust plans are in place to turn an urgently-needed ceasefire into lasting peace".

A Downing Street summary of the call made no mention of Palestinian statehood, which Sir Keir has faced calls to immediately recognize after French President Emmanuel Macron announced his country would do so in September.

Some 221 MPs from Labour, the Conservatives, Liberal Democrats, SNP, Greens, Plaid Cymru, SDLP and independents have signed a letter urging the Government to follow suit at a UN meeting next week.

The majority of those who have signed, 131, are Labour MPs.

The Government says it is a question of "when, not if" statehood is recognized but that its immediate focus should be on getting aid into the territory.

Mr Murray said on Sunday: "As a government, we are committed to the recognition of Palestine, but we need to work with international partners and we need to use that moment to galvanize change."

It needs to be part of a pathway to peace.

He added: "140 countries have already recognized Palestine. The suffering is still continuing."

Sir Keir and Mr. Trump, who is in South Ayrshire on a private visit to his Turnberry golf course, are expected to meet on Monday.

Sabtu, 26 Juli 2025

Elly De La Cruz comes through as Reds beat Rays, secure series win

Elly De La Cruz certainly looks well-equipped for a playoff race. In fact, the Cincinnati Reds all do when they're rolling like they are right now.

But it was De La Cruz, as fans chanted his name, who came up big and brought a crowd of 39,848 to its feet with the game-winning hit against the Tampa Bay Rays on July 26. De La Cruz drove in two runs on a bloop, bases-loaded, two-out single that lifted the Reds over the Rays, 6-2, on a night at Great American Ball Park when hits were in short supply for both clubs for much of the contest.

"Everybody likes the big moments," De La Cruz said. "Big crowd, tight game. It was a tight situation."

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The victory lifted the Reds to 55-50, equaling the five-games-over-.500 high-water mark they had already achieved once in 2025. Cincinnati will enter the July 27 series finale against Tampa Bay with the series win in hand and one game back in the race for the No. 3 Wild Card spot in the National League, trailing the San Diego Padres , who beat St. Louis.

Graham Ashcraft was the winning pitcher for the Reds. Andrew Abbott started the game and allowed one run and two hits in six innings as his ERA dropped from 2.13 to 2.09.

We're playing really good baseball right now," Abbott said. "I think we kind of sat down and had a discussion as a team where we're just kind of like, let's keep stacking series wins. Let's control the things that we can control. Obviously, trying to put ourselves in a situation to be buyers, to be in the playoffs and we're right on the door knocking. We're really just trying to focus on the things that we can do.

"So, really just trying to focus on the things we can do and try to get in there, and keep playing well all the way through the end and hopefully at the end, we're in the postseason."

A pitchers' duel through five innings, both clubs started to gain traction offensively in the sixth.

Yandy Diaz opened the scoring with a solo home run to left-center field to lead off the sixth. The Reds, who wore blue throwback-style caps with a National Baseball Hall of Fame patch in honor of this weekend's induction festivities, came back to take the lead in the bottom of the inning when a hard-hit Austin Hays grounder slid under the glove of Rays' shortstop Taylor Walls.

Tampa Bay tied the game in a controversial manner in its next at-bat. Graham Ashcraft appeared to have hit the strike zone for a would-be called third strike against the Rays' Josh Lowe, but home plate umpire Willie Traynor called the pitch a ball.

The next pitch from Ashcraft was lined into left field for a game-tying single. Reds manager Terry Francona then appeared to argue with Traynor from the dugout and was ejected. Francona came out to the field to continue the dispute and crew chief Todd Tichenor diffused the exchange.

Then, De La Cruz delivered his game-winning hit on a full count after initially falling behind, 0-2, against Rays lefty reliever Garrett Cleavinger.

The patience he has, he's seeing the ball really well over the last couple weeks, or the last couple months, actually," said Reds bench coach Freddie Benavides. "For him to put it in play, especially against one of their top left-handed relievers, so, it was a great at-bat and great things happen when you put it in play.

Benavides was the acting manager for Cincinnati after Francona's ejection.

T.J. Friedl and Matt McLain added more insurance runs in the eighth inning. Friedl hit a dribbler single that got past Lowe, who entered the game at shortstop. A McLain single made it 6-2.

The Reds will go for a sweep of the Rays on July 27, (1:40 p.m.) as Cincinnati's Brady Singer (7-8, 4.84 ERA) is scheduled to start against Tampa's Shane Baz (8-6, 4.66 ERA).

This article originally appeared on Cincinnati Enquirer: Elly De La Cruz comes through in the clutch as Reds beat Rays, take series win

Young Woman Balanced Work, School, and Family Without Any Complaints, But Her Family Treated Her Enjoyment of Her Free Time Like a Crime

Pexels/Reddit

Young adults still living at home often find themselves caught between independence and their family's expectations.

Despite holding down a job and managing her responsibilities with poise, one 20-year-old's frequent time out with friends has caused growing friction at home.

You'll want to read on for this one.

Am I the asshole for going out every day?

I (20F) live with my parents, my uncle, and a sister. I have a full-time job where I leave very early and usually have the whole day free.

She works hard, so she wants to play hard too.

Over the past year and a half, I have been going out a lot. I have kept in touch with high school friends. Since we now have adult money, we like to hang out every once in a while.

I have also made friends from work, and we like to get together and hang out. I have a boyfriend, and I also like to spend a lot of time with my sister.

She is proud to have an active social life that brings her fulfillment.

The activities are endless — from going hiking, watching movies, going shopping, playing sports, trying new food shops, playing video games together, attending the occasional event, and more. I go out with someone different about 3–4 times a week (sometimes 5).

In addition, I have my own things to do, such as going to the gym, attending health appointments, or working an extra shift at work.

But not everyone is so pleased that she is thriving.

My mother and uncle (they are siblings) think it is not okay for me to go out so much. They believe that is not right, and that as long as I live with them, I need to respect their rules.

My dad doesn't care too much because I'm always honest with them about what I'm doing, and he thinks I'm responsible.

In her eyes, she does more than pull her weight around the house.

Mind you, I pay household bills every month and buy two weeks' worth of groceries a month. I study and go to school. I save money from each paycheck. I keep my room relatively clean. I work a full-time job.

She thinks they have absolutely nothing to worry about when it comes to her activities outside of the house.

I share my location at all times. I tell them what I'm doing and who I am with. I come back on time for curfew.

I am also doing safe activities. I don't do anything illegal and avoid situations that could get me in any legal trouble. I respect my mom and uncle and want to continue doing so.

Regardless, things have been incredibly tense between them.

This is the first major disagreement we have ever had. It's come to the point where I lie to my friends and tell them I can't hang out with them anymore because I'm busy doing something else. (I am not—I'm just at home doom-scrolling with all my chores done.)

Am I the asshole?

She's honest, thoughtful and careful — but for her family, it's still not enough.

What did Reddit think of all this?

Maybe it's time to break free from her family's oppressive rule.

She's paying the bills, so she more than deserves a little freedom of her own.

Now's the time to seize the day and enjoy her youth, not be bogged down by her family's expectations.

Maybe her family is simply stuck in the past.

She's doing everything right, yet she still feels like she's being punished for simply living her life.

This is no way to start your twenties!

If you liked that post, check out this post about a woman who tracked down a contractor who tried to disappear without a trace.

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The post Young Woman Balanced Work, School, And Family Without Any Complaints, But Her Family Treated Her Enjoyment Of Her Free Time Like A Crime first on newsrealtime .

Lost Security Footage Helps Police Solve College Student's 2020 Disappearance from LA Dispensary

At the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, a college student disappeared from his place of work. For investigators in Los Angeles County, manipulated security footage might have held the clues as to who killed. Juan Hernandez and who made him disappear.

His mother, Yajaira Hernandez, spoke with Buried in the Backyard airing Saturdays at 8/7c on Oxygen — about life as a mom to three sons. The family of four lived together and shared a love of running marathons, bonding as a family "connected."

I love all my three kids, and we all have a great bond, but the bond that Juan and I had was different," said the mother. "He was always closer to me.

Who was Juan Hernandez?

Juan Hernandez, 21, was the middle son of Yajaira Hernandez, a young man with "hopes and dreams" of becoming an electrical engineer one day after completing his courses at El Camino College in Los Angeles County. In 2020, at the height of the COVID-19 lockdown, the beloved son found work at a local marijuana dispensary, working the 3:00 p.m. to 10:00 p.m. shift just 20 minutes from home, according to his mother.

It wasn't an ideal job; I wasn't the happiest of moms, but he had to work," she said. "He was trying to save up for school, so all I could do was support him.

Yajaira Hernandez last saw Juan Hernandez around 2:00 p.m. on September 22, 2020, as he was getting ready to go to work, taking his mother's car to get there. He texted "I'll see you soon" at 10:00 p.m., as he usually did after work, although the mother fell asleep shortly after.

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The next morning, there was no sign of the college student.

I think the world stopped for me in that moment," said the grieving mother. "He'd never not come home, never leave me stranded. We share locations on our cell phones; his location is off. This is not normal.

When authorities told Yajaira Hernandez she had to wait 72 hours to file an official missing persons report, the mother started taking action to conduct her own investigation.

A mother's search for Juan Hernandez

Yajaira Hernandez visited the dispensary and found a security guard who knew the shop's manager, later identified as Ethan Astaphan, though at that time only known as "E." Through the guard, the mother got Astaphan on the phone, and she requested access to the security cameras throughout the business.

Astaphan told her they were live feed only and, therefore, would be of no use in her ongoing search for her son.

Yajaira Hernandez took her case to social media, resulting in thousands of shares and, most importantly, attention from the LAPD, namely Detectives Daniel Jaramillo and Jennifer Hammer.

Reports of Juan Hernandez's captivity

In the days following Juan Hernandez's disappearance, Yajaira Hernandez received ransom notes by text from multiple numbers. The alleged kidnappers demanded $7,000 in exchange for Juan Hernandez's safe return.

Detectives Jaramillo and Hammer recognized "a potential that his life could be in danger," prompting them to obtain warrants to search Juan Hernandez's phone, bank, and social media records.

As digital investigations continued into the possible ransom, Det. Hammer told Buried in the Backyard that it was "concerning and suspicious" that Juan Hernandez's phone was turned off near the dispensary soon after his last shift ended. Days later, their most prominent lead came when Yajaira Hernandez's missing vehicle popped up out of the blue.

Ms. Hernandez's car was found two to three miles from the dispensary, and that area, where it was located, is a very high crime, prostitution, gang area," said Jaramillo. "It's a rougher part of town.

But searches of the car yielded nothing, and the same was true for the alleged ransom notes to Yajaira Hernandez's phone. Police said digital records proved the messages were part of an elaborate extortion scheme, in which scammers from other continents obtained her phone number from missing poster ads and tried to take the panicked mother's money.

Yajaira Hernandez was no closer to finding her son.

On Sept. 29, 2020, authorities used a search warrant to investigate the dispensary. They collected the security footage, which, contrary to what Astaphan claimed to Yajaira Hernandez, was not at all live-feed only.

There's no video before September 22nd; it starts on the 23rd," Hammer said. "Obviously, that's suspicious. Why is there no video before the 22nd?

Surveillance footage offers new clues

On the morning of Sept. 23, security footage showed three people cleaning the shop's floor, two of whom were identified by the security guard as Astaphan and dispensary owner Weijia "James" Peng.

The third person was later identified as Peng's girlfriend, Sonita Heng.

But by then, Peng had flown from LAX airport to Turkey, and detectives had to build their case. They enlisted the help of the Glendale Police Department’s crime lab, since they had the technology to recover the lost surveillance footage.

"There were over one million files that were recovered, but only one to two frames from one clip captured on September 22, when Juan went missing, just less than a second of movement," crime lab detective Juan Giraldo told. Buried in the Backyard .

According to Giraldo, the camera pointing to the dispensary's display case showed someone resembling Juan Hernandez "being taken down to the ground" by two individuals, soon after the missing man's shift ended. He said he felt "confident" the clip had been purposefully deleted from the security system.

But there was no way of knowing whether Juan Hernandez was dead in the video.

"While Ethan Astaphan is choking Juan Hernandez, you see James Peng lean down, and there's something weird in his hand," said Los Angeles County Deputy District Attorney Ethan Milius.

Investigators theorized it could have been a cell phone.

Detectives investigate Astaphan, Peng, and Heng

In October 2020, detectives executed search warrants for phones belonging to Ethan Astaphan, James Peng, and Sonita Heng. The results returned the following month painted a clear picture of their movements on the night of Juan Hernandez's disappearance.

Records showed them heading to the Mojave Desert, where the odds of narrowing down a location within a 10-mile radius were "minimal to zero," Det. Jaramillo said.

Searches in the vast desert began on November 13, 2020, focusing on a grid between two cell phone towers. The search widened the next day, comprising dozens of investigators, ATVs, and helicopter crews. Search and rescue dogs from San Bernardino County helped home in on the nearly skeletal remains of Juan Hernandez, close to a fallen barbed wire fence and partially buried in the sand.

Two months had passed since Juan Hernandez disappeared, and animals had gotten to the decomposed remains.

It destroyed us," said the victim's mother. "As individuals, and it destroyed us as a family.

Detectives make arrests

On Nov. 19, 2020, following the discovery of Juan Hernandez's body, investigators secured arrest warrants for Astaphan and Heng. James Peng, however, was still in Turkey.

According to Prosecutor Habib Balian, a search through Astaphan's phone messages offered "a glimpse into the plan that he and James Peng had been formulating."

"In their minds, they believed that Juan was stealing from them," Balian told Buried in the Backyard .

However, the police said there was no evidence to support that any theft had taken place.

On December 16, 2020, Sonita Heng - through her attorney - requested a meeting with detectives, agreeing to talk in exchange for a lighter conviction. In a recorded interview obtained by Buried in the Backyard , Heng tearfully said she feared for her life, which was why she went along with the men's devious plans.

Heng told detectives that Peng - her boyfriend - used a syringe to inject Hernandez with ketamine, which explained the unknown object seen in the suspect's hand during the Sept. 22 attack.

She said Peng injected more after Hernandez had died during the two-and-a-half-hour drive to the desert.

He injected [it] into Juan's eyeball," Heng cried on tape. "Ethan was making fun of it. He said, 'I was trying to inject it into his eyeball to see if his eyeball changed.'

When Hernandez was found in the desert, a San Bernardino County coroner was unable to determine the cause of death. However, with Heng's information, a reexamination confirmed the presence of ketamine in Hernandez's toxicology, a drug for which testing had not been conducted initially.

The report was later amended to show Hernandez died from both strangulation and ketamine toxicity, according to Hammer.

Authorities believed Peng was still in Turkey, waiting for the right time to enter China. It would take two years to arrest and extradite him to the United States to face a judge, with the help of Turkish authorities and the U.S. Marshals.

The murder trial of Astaphan and Peng

The trial began on February 9, 2024, when the court heard about the men killing Hernandez, and Heng helping them try to cover up their crimes.

Ethan got into Juan's car and he left it in a high-prostitution area," Det. Hammer said. "The next day, they took Juan's belongings, went to Newport Beach, and they burned Juan's items.

It took a jury only a few hours to find Astaphan and Peng guilty of first-degree murder.

Astaphan is currently serving a 25-to-life sentence; Peng is currently serving a 26-to-life sentence, according to prison records reviewed by Oxygen.com .

For her testimony and cooperation, Sonita Heng was sentenced to probation and spent 112 days in jail.

We remember Juan being kind and always being there for his loved ones," said Yajaira Hernandez. "We honor his life by trying to be better because [these] individuals took his body. But his spirit, and his love, all of that remains in my heart.

Don't miss all-new episodes of Buried in the Backyard airing Saturdays at 8/7c on Oxygen.

190th Air Refueling Wing supports flood relief mission in Texas

TOPEKA, Kan. (WIBW) - Airmen from the 190th Air Refueling Wing, Topeka, transported 12 firefighters, four K-9 handlers, and four search and rescue dogs from the Czech Emergency Response Team from Ramstein Air Base, Germany, to Texas on July 13.

According to a press release from the 190th Air Refueling Wing, the 190th aircrew, while providing transportation for members on temporary duty, was tasked with the urgent mission of direct support of rescue operations following the catastrophic floods in Texas.

We are part of a classified search and rescue team and our mission is to support the National Guard and those recently affected by the floods in Texas," said Colonel Jaromir Piesch, leader of the Czech Emergency Response Team. "The Texas National Guard has a direct partnership with the Czech Army, and due to the recent natural disaster and more than 160 people still missing in Texas, we were called into this mission because of our specialized experience with K-9 specific search and rescues.

The Czech Army has maintained a strategic partnership with the Texas National Guard since 1993 as part of the Department of Defense National Guard Bureau State Partnership Program, fostering three decades of joint training and real-world missions.

Notably, this collaboration enabled the Texas Air National Guard to support Czech emergency services by using the MQ-9 Reaper aircraft to conduct aerial damage assessments, an essential capability that helped Czech authorities prioritize recovery efforts and restore critical infrastructure following severe floods in early October 2024.

We have provided similar support to countries like Turkey, Pakistan, and other missions we have been called to across the globe," said Piesch. "Our team is trained in search and rescue, medical stabilization, and aid. The whole team is here to support the K-9 handlers, and we have a reconnaissance team who is prepared to provide extraction of injured people as well.

The operation was coordinated through a combined effort involving the Adjutant General of Texas, the Chief of the National Guard Bureau, Ramstein Air Base leadership, and the Czech Embassy in Washington, D.C. The request came through the National Guard Bureau and utilized the 190th's unique availability and proximity to Germany to execute the mission.

Here we will do our best to help the American people and support the National Guard," said Maj. Jiri Studnicka, member of the Czech Emergency Response Team. "For us, it brings great satisfaction being able to help the National Guard as they have helped in support of our troops. We are very proud to work with them.

The Czech firefighters were flown directly from Ramstein Air Base to Texas aboard the 190th ARW KC-135 Stratotanker, the only National Guard aircraft available and positioned to efficiently and effectively carry out the short-notice mission.

This mission is an example of the National Guard's ability to respond rapidly and support our international partnerships," said Lt. Col. Adam Huntington, Director of Operations for the 117th Air Refueling Squadron. "I'm proud of our entire team, including our operations and support personnel and officers back at Forbes Field, who made this mission possible. Being able to help people devastated by the floods is why serving in the National Guard is so special.

Saturday night Orioles game thread: vs. Rockies, 7:05pm ET

Where to watch: MASN/MASN+

Probable pitchers: LHP Trevor Rogers (3-1, 1.74 ERA, 35 K) vs. RHP Antonio Sanzatela

Losing sucks. Losing 24-2 against the Reds on Easter sucked. Dropping a game against Tampa after leading 8-0 sucked. Watching former Oriole Kyle Stowers hit three home runs at Camden Yards in an 11-1 loss to the Marlins sucked.

But losing to a Rockies team on pace to tie the record for most losses in a season, especially after taking an early 4-0 lead, that has to be the moment that sucked the most this season. The loss to Colorado in the opening game of the series felt like the true point of no return for this season. In previous years, such a loss would have been a "sound the alarms" moment. Now, with the trade deadline five days away and the O's nine games out of a Wild Card spot, there's no reason to get alarmed because there's nothing left to salvage.

One thing that should bring Birdland members at least some sense of joy is another outing from Trevor Rogers. The 27-year-old left-hander has been one of very few silver linings around the dark cloud hovering over the 2025 campaign. He's pitched so well in his seven starts that he's third on the Orioles with a 2.0 bWAR, first among Baltimore pitchers. Rogers' development might give the O's a jump start on rebuilding this rotation for 2026 , but he will need to maintain his current level over his remaining 10-12 starts this year.

Despite spending the first 4+ years of his career in the National League, Rogers doesn't have a lot of experience facing the Rockies. He first faced Colorado during his All-Star season in 2021, when he pitched 7 IP, allowed 3 H, 2 R (1 ER), 1 BB and struck out K in an 11-4 Miami win. His only other appearance against the Rox came in Denver and didn't go as well, as Rogers allowed five runs, five walks and only lasted 3.2 innings.

The good news for Rogers today is that he doesn't have to face this Rockies team at Coors Field, and his starting at Camden Yards has generally been a great thing for the O's. In two starts in Baltimore this year, Rogers has allowed only one run and five hits over 14.2 innings while striking out 12.

Offensively, the Orioles should be able to take advantage of Rockies starter Antonio Senzatela. The 30-year-old from Venezuela has the most losses in baseball and the most hits allowed. His 6.41 ERA would be the second-worst among qualified starters, except he has struggled so much in his 20 starts that he doesn't have enough innings to qualify.

Orioles Lineup

  1. Jackson Holliday (L) 2B
  2. Jordan Westburg (R) 3B
  3. Gunnar Henderson (L) SS
  4. Ryan O'Hearn (L) 1B
  5. Ramón Laureano (R) RF
  6. Colton Cowser (L) LF
  7. Tyler O'Neill (R) DH
  8. Cedric Mullins (L) CF
  9. Jacob Stallings (R) C

Rockies Lineup

  1. Tyler Freeman (R) RF
  2. Ezequiel Tovar (R) SS
  3. Hunter Goodman (R) C
  4. Jordan Beck (R) LF
  5. Thairo Estrad (R) 2B
  6. Mickey Moniak (L) CF
  7. Kyle Farmer (R) DH
  8. Warming Bernabel (R) 1B
  9. Orlando Arcia (R)

NY Giants Barely Represented on SI.com's All-Quarter Century Team

Based on how the last few years have gone in the Meadowlands, really the last decade, many New York Giants fans are always eager to jump into a time machine and go back the glory days .

Whenever a media outlet compiles a list of top players from the last 25 years, there is seemingly an opportunity to reminisce about all the success the team enjoyed in the first 10-plus seasons of the millennium. Well, Sports Illustrated is not being so generous when it comes to representing the Giants on their all-quarter-century team .

Hall of Fame defensive end Michael Strahan was the franchise's only representative, earning enough votes to make the third-team edge rusher group.

Although he had a huge part in two of the most unforgettable plays in NFL history and defeated the dynastic New England Patriots in two separate Super Bowls, quarterback Eli Manning was not considered for this all-quarter century team.

The quarterback position was a loaded group, with Tom Brady, Patrick Mahomes, and Peyton Manning all getting their due. Two-time MVP Lamar Jackson was the only other signal-caller to collect votes.

Manning's uneven regular season numbers cost him first-ballot enshrinement in Canton, Ohio , and it keeps him out of this grouping of modern greats.

Apart from the two-time Super Bowl MVP, other notable former Giants players missed the cut. Odell Beckham Jr. was one of the best wide receivers in the NFL during his five-year tenure with New York, earning two Second-Team All-Pro selections and reaching 1,300 yards and 10 touchdowns three times. Injuries surely hurt his chances here.

Defensive ends Justin Tuck, Osi Umenyiora, and Jason Pierre-Paul each earned First-Team All-Pro honors once during their respective tenures with the Giants and were all difference-makers for several years.

Chris Snee, who is currently works as a scout For the Giants, he was a crucial component of New York's offensive line. The retired right guard was both durable and imposing, earning a spot on two All-Pro teams and becoming a four-time Pro Bowler.

Jeremy Shockey established himself as an elite tight end during his six seasons with the Giants.

None of these men could meet MMQB's standards. It is important to appreciate the one who did, though.

This legend is one of the greatest ever of the NY Giants

While no one can replace Lawrence Taylor on the field, a strong argument could be made for Michael Strahan, who helped define a new era of Big Blue football while displaying the in-game ferocity that fans had grown accustomed to seeing during the celebrated Bill Parcells era.

Strahan was a monster on the field, recording 141.5 sacks, which ranks 10th all-time, along with 663 solo tackles, 131 tackles for loss, 24 forced fumbles, and four interceptions in 216 regular-season games with the Giants.

He won the 2001 "Defensive Player of the Year" award and was a four-time First-Team All-Pro. The 22.5 sacks he recorded that season are tied with T.J. Watt for the most in NFL history (Al Baker's 23.0 in 1978 is the unofficial record, as the stat was not tracked then).

1993 second-round draft pick was a juggernaut on the gridiron and a respected leader in the locker room. He has parlayed his larger-than-life personality into a highly prosperous television career and remains one of the most recognizable athletes in the media today.

Strahan left a permanent imprint on the Giants and NFL, so his placement on MMQB's all-quarter century team is certainly justified. Present and future players will try to follow his example and craft their own special legacy in East Rutherford, New Jersey.

What happens next with the NY Giants? Find out! Follow and like us on Facebook . Visit our YouTube channel for the latest videos. Want to send a question in for our mailbag? You can do so here .

More New York Giants Coverage

This article was originally published on www.si.com/nfl/giants as NY Giants Barely Represented on SI.com's All-Quarter Century Team .

Wyandotte County deputy killed in KCK shooting; suspect identified

KANSAS CITY, Kan. – Police are investigating after a Wyandotte County deputy was killed in a shooting on Saturday afternoon.

The shooting took place at about 3:45 p.m. near South 30th Street and Shawnee Drive in Kansas City, Kansas. The deputy was taken to a hospital, where he succumbed to his injuries, KCKPD said.

The victim has since been identified as Elijah Ming.

See the latest headlines in Kansas City and across Kansas, Missouri

According to KCKPD, Deputy Ming was initially called to the area for a civil standby at about 3:30 p.m. after a woman requested that a law enforcement officer accompany her as she moved out of her home. The Kansas Bureau of Investigation (KBI) said she had concerns about her safety.

The woman reportedly told investigators that when her friends tried to help her, the suspect, identified by KBI as 38-year-old Shawn Harris, had threatened her with a gun.

After the woman requested help, Deputy Ming and a KCKPD officer responded to the scene. However, according to KBI, as they approached the front door, Harris shot at the officers multiple times from inside the house.

The KCKPD officer was uninjured in the shooting, but Deputy Ming suffered life-threatening injuries.

After the shooting, multiple law enforcement officers responded to the scene. As officers attempted life-saving measures on Deputy Ming, gunfire was exchanged between KCKPD and the sheriff's office.

According to KBI, Harris had barricaded himself inside the house and was shot during the multi-hour standoff.

Eventually, the police were able to negotiate by phone and get Harris out of the house by about 5 p.m. He was then taken into custody and taken to a hospital, where he is said to have suffered non-life-threatening injuries.

While formal charges are yet to be filed, Harris has been arrested and booked in the Johnson County Jail on suspicion of capital murder of a law enforcement officer.

Newborn Kelce Taylor becomes youngest member of Swifties, Chiefs fandom

KBI said Deputy Ming had also been taken to a hospital with life-threatening injuries. But despite life-saving efforts, he later died from his injuries.

At this time, investigations are being taken over by the KBI. In a news release addressing the deadly shooting, the bureau said:

This independent investigation aims to discover all events leading up to the officer-involved shooting. In cases of police use of force, the KBI releases details to the public as soon as possible. This information is preliminary in nature, and is based on evidence collected and early statements from the parties involved, witnesses, medical personnel, and others. It does not represent final or comprehensive findings, which take several weeks to complete.

When this investigation concludes, case findings will be presented to the Wyandotte County District Attorney for charging decisions. The investigation is ongoing.

KCK and Wyandotte County officials spoke at a press conference Saturday night.

Mayor Tyrone Garner called the shooting a senseless and unnecessary act of violence. He also asked the community to keep Deputy Ming's family and his fellow law enforcement and public safety officials in their thoughts and prayers.

Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

For the latest news, weather, sports, and streaming video, visit FOX 4 Kansas City WDAF-TV | News, Weather, Sports.

The Rich And Profitable Corporations Get Tax Cuts But 22 Million Families Lose Nutrition Support, Says Bernie Sanders, Calls It 'Disgusting'

Millions of low-income American families are set to lose critical food assistance under a new law signed recently by the President Donald Trump , as wealthy individuals and major corporations receive fresh tax breaks .

The sweeping policy overhaul, part of what Republicans called "One Big Beautiful Bill Act," is facing backlash for what critics say are cruel tradeoffs.

Small-Town Grocers And Families Brace For Impact

The cuts to the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, or SNAP, are projected to affect 22.3 million households, with an average loss of $146 per month in benefits, according to research by the Urban Institute . The law also imposes stricter work requirements and new eligibility rules that could disqualify many people, including veterans, older adults and working parents - if they fail to meet documentation or hour thresholds.

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<failed> richest Americans who are doing phenomenally well? Rewarded with tax breaks," Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-VT) wrote on X Recently. "The largest corporations enjoying record-breaking profits?" Tax breaks American families in need? Trump and Congressional Republicans cut nutrition support to 22.3 million of them. Disgusting.

Critics argue that the policy disproportionately hurts low-income communities, especially in rural areas that often supported Trump in the last presidential election. In many small towns, SNAP recipients make up the majority of customers for independent grocery stores, which now fear closure or layoffs.

I lean pretty heavily to the right most of the time, Spence Udall , the mayor of conservative St. Johns, Arizona, which has just one grocery store, said Politico But one of the things that I do lean to the left on is we're a pretty wealthy country, we can help people out.

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Grocers like RF Buche , who operates the only store on South Dakota’s Pine Ridge Indian Reservation, say the impact could be devastating. "I'd just as soon cut a leg off as have my customers in the poorest county in the United States go without food," Buche told Politico. He estimates that 60% to 80% of his shoppers rely on SNAP, which accounts for nearly half of his revenue.

A study by the Commonwealth Fund warns that the SNAP cuts will trigger thousands of job losses across agriculture, grocery retail and food processing sectors. That ripple effect could be especially harsh in rural areas, where small stores double as community hubs and economic anchors.

As the legislation is implemented, grocery store owners, food bank operators, and families across the U.S. are preparing for a sharp decline in food access. As Sanders put it: "This bill eliminates nutrition assistance for millions of hungry children at a time when we have the highest rate of childhood poverty among nearly any major nation on earth."

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This article The Rich And Profitable Corporations Get Tax Cuts But 22 Million Families Lose Nutrition Support, Says Bernie Sanders, Calls It 'Disgusting' originally appeared on newsrealtime .

The Doctor Doom Easter Egg in Fantastic Four: First Steps, Explained

Spoilers for "The Fantastic Four: First Steps" follow.

"The Fantastic Four: First Steps" is the best Fantastic Four movie to date , but no "F4" movie is complete without one crucial character: the Four's nemesis, Doctor Victor von Doom. Doom has been absent from the "First Steps" marketing, but the movie does Offer a sneak peek at him in its mid-credits scene. In an apparent set-up for "Avengers: Doomsday," Doom (who remains mostly unseen, but will be played by Robert Downey Jr.) teleports into the Baxter Building and introduces himself to young Franklin Richards.

But Doom's presence had been foreshadowed earlier. During "First Steps," Sue Storm (Vanessa Kirby) has founded a United Nations-like assembly called the Future Foundation. One seat is noticeably empty: the delegation for the Eastern-European country Latveria is nowhere to be seen. No, it's not a real country. Latveria is Doom's domain, and the previous "Fantastic Four" films have depicted him as a Latverian-American immigrant. In the comics, Doom rules Latveria. That's why the F4 can never put him in jail no matter all the horrible things Doom has done to them ; as the sovereign ruler of Latveria, Doom has diplomatic immunity from prosecution. Doom's genius and inventions also mean he can fight off any coup attempts or U.S. backed invasions.

Doom's animus is a burning hatred for his college rival, Reed Richards. supposedly because Reed sabotaged one of Doom's experiments, but really because Doom just can't stand that Reed is smarter than him. Assuming Doom is the ruler of Latveria in "First Steps" (and by extension, the Doom in the post-credits scene is the one from Earth-828), it makes total sense that Latveria would not participate in an organization founded by Richards' wife.

Now, anyone who calls themselves "Doctor Doom" can't be very nice, and Victor isn't. But as the ruler of Latveria, is he the malevolent tyrant you'd assume he is? That answer is not so simple.

Read more: Every Marvel Character Locked Up In The Raft

The History Of Latveria In Marvel Comics, Explained

Doom's very first appearance in 1962's "Fantastic Four" #5 (by Stan Lee and Jack Kirby) quickly dispensed with his origin. He was introduced as an old schoolmate of Reed Richards' who was seduced by the dark arts, but how he became Doctor Doom was left unsaid. He owned a castle as well, but there was no mention of him being a true monarch.

Lee & Kirby's full origin for Doom only appeared in 1964's "Fantastic Four Annual" #2. Victor von Doom was born to a poor Romani tribe in Latveria, which was then ruled by a cruel Baron. Doom's father Werner failed to save the Baron's terminally ill wife and froze to death trying to flee the Baron's troops. Victor later left to be educated in America, but we know how that It turned out. After becoming Doctor Doom, Victor returned to Latveria and led the people in revolt against the Baron. (Lee/Kirby skipped over this, but Ed Brubaker and Pablo Raimondi's expanded 2005 origin "Books of Doom" turned the Latverian revolution into its climax.)

What is consistent is that Doom elevated Latveria from a backwater nation into a superpower. (He also renamed the nation's capital city Doomstadt.) Many Marvel writers have different opinions on who Doom truly is behind his mask , though, so how Doom treats his subjects and how they feel about him can vary. Lee & Kirby suggested that Doom's people respected him, but feared his tempestuous wrath too.

In "Fantastic Four" #57, a Latverian citizen bumps into Doom; Doom is ready to eviscerate the clumsy "clod," but cools his anger because he's trying to deceive the Silver Surfer into trusting him.

John Byrne's "Fantastic Four" offered a modern take on Doom, as described in the words of Marvel.com , a "somewhat benevolent dictator." In an earlier story, "Fantastic Four" #200, the F4 helped overthrow Doom and placed Zorba Fortunov - the last surviving heir to the Latverian royal family - on the throne. When the F4 visit Latveria again in "Fantastic Four" #246-247, our heroes are stunned to find that Latveria has fallen into ruin under Zorba's ruthless but incompetent leadership, and the people want Doom back. The Doctor obliges them.

Doom may be an autocrat who restricts personal liberties, but he keeps his people safe and well-fed. He's like a stern father, while all of Latveria are his beloved children (almost literally with Kristoff Vernard, a Latverian orphan whom Doom takes as his ward). Many of the best Doctor Doom stories explore his leadership of Latveria — I hope that "Avengers: Doomsday," which looks to be a packed movie, doesn't leave this out.

"The Fantastic Four: First Steps" is playing in theaters.

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Read the original article on SlashFilm .

New tiny libraries sprout up across Ulster County

Gambar terkait New tiny libraries sprout up across Ulster County (dari Bing)

PORT EWEN, N.Y. — Residents of Esopus, Kingston, and New Paltz may have noticed some new, rather unconventional tiny libraries appearing in local community spaces.

Installed with a grant from "The Field," a Manhattan-based organization, the five tiny libraries were all constructed by area artists.

All of them are just so wonderful," said Nina Nichols, a local artist and member of the Esopus Town Environmental Board who coordinated the project, in an interview. "This project came along and they all went so hard on it.

The term "library" is used rather loosely, as participating artists were encouraged to be as creative as they wanted. For example, Hudson-based artist Dinah Gumbs' library, dubbed "The Worm Church," dispenses moss and seeds from the Connelly Community Garden in James Reiker Park.

"You can come and leave plants and seeds and take plants and seeds," Nichols said.

Gumbs interprets her library as a portal connecting the deep earth and the living world.

The Kingston Land Trust's Red Fox Ravine, located off Wilbur Avenue in Kingston, is home to the "Library of Magical Objects," crafted by local artist Cal Trumann. Trumann manages the grounds for The Rêve, a trans- and people of color-led collective house and community sanctuary located outside of Kingston.

Constructed primarily out of wood pieces reclaimed from damaged and discarded furniture, the library is home to natural items like stones and fossils, as well as zines and tarot cards.

"They left some interesting stones inside, and you can come and leave objects of importance to you," Nichols said.

Another library in Kingston, "Baba Yaga's Little Free Library," sits in the Kingston Land Trust Forest Preserve. Crafted by artists Aurora Brush and Sam Goldberg, the library is inspired by the Slavic folk character Baba Yaga, a trickster, healer, and witch who dwells in a house that walks on chicken legs.

The library will be maintained by Cosmic Dog House Press, which regularly stocks it with zines, used books, seeds, art supplies, and other items from Hudson Valley creators and collaborators.

Another seed library sits outside the Unison Art Center in New Paltz. Constructed by Kingston-based artist Kai Navarrete, the library offers seeds, plant cuttings, and small gifts donated by local residents, all free to take, grow, and share.

Navarrete mainly works with tile, wood, and found objects.

"Kai printed all this seed-embedded paper to put in there," Nichols said. "Those flew off the shelves," Nichols said.

Outside the Town of Esopus Library in Port Ewen is artist Langston Williams' Star Wars-inspired AT-AT Walker Library. Two doors on the side of the AT-AT open to reveal a variety of books donated by members of the community. Locals are encouraged to take a book and leave a book.

Williams' library also serves as a bulletin board.

We're all on our phones, we're on the internet, we're so hyper-focused on everything else," Williams said in an interview. "I grew up in a time where I had to read books to learn. I had to look at words and put them together to make sentences.

People don't do that anymore," Williams added. "It's instant gratification.

I like robotics, I like technology," Williams said when asked why he chose a Star Wars theme. "Even though it's kind of a bad guy creature, I liked it. I just thought it was so cool.

Williams said he hopes the library continues to be a place for the community to come together.

"I want to be a part of the solution, not part of the problem," he said.

© 2025 Daily Freeman, Kingston, N.Y. Visit www.newsrealtime . Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

Hines leads UCWGA Championship heading into the final round

Gambar terkait Hines leads UCWGA Championship heading into the final round (dari Bing)

KINGSTON, N.Y. — While the challenging conditions at Green Acres Golf Course confused most of the competitors in the second round of the Ulster County Women’s Golf Association (UCWGA) Championship, the top of the leaderboard didn't change much when the scores were posted at the end of the round on Saturday, July 26.

First-round leader Kim Hines, a science teacher from the Saugerties School District, remained in first place heading into Sunday's final round at the Wiltwyck Golf Club in Kingston.

Hines' 19-over-par 91 was the lowest score recorded among the dozen players in the UCWGA championship flight at Green Acres. Coupled with Friday's 13-over 83 at Woodstock Golf Club, Hines has a two-round total of 32-over 174.

Kathy Murphy of the Swan Country Club in Saugerties remained in second place with a 36-hole total of 178, following a 93 at Green Acres. She started with an 85 at Woodstock.

Saugerties resident Kathy Murphy hits from a fairway bunker on the par-4 11th hole during the second round of the Ulster County Women's Golf Association (UCWGA) Championship on Saturday, July 26, 2025, at Green Acres Golf Course in Kingston, New York. Rick Remsnyder/Daily Freeman

Kristen Osterhoudt (88-92-180) from the Shawangunk Golf Course at Stoeckeler Memorial Park in Ellenville moved into third after UCWA tournament director Diane Myers (88-96-184) dropped into fourth. Myers had a tough front nine at Green Acres, shooting a 50 that included needing nine strokes to finish the challenging par-3 seventh hole.

Hines felt she was too cautious with her short game, especially trying to negotiate the fast and severely sloped greens of Green Acres.

I was tentative on putting and chipping," said Hines, who will be seeking her fourth UCWGA title and first since 2013. "That's what got me in trouble today. I should have just chipped it past the hole and putted or chipped back up to the hole instead of trying to get cute and let it roll on. Green Acres owner Brian Bonesteel has done a great job with this course, but you have to know how to play it. Sometimes, I think we gave the greens too much respect and left the putts short. But it is what it is and tomorrow's another day.

Hines said she's looking forward to playing Wiltwyck, but admitted it has gotten the best of her at times.

It's hard for me to score there," Hines said. "But I just have to go out and keep it in the fairway. The greens are always in good shape. It's going to be tough and it's going to be long. I don't know what the weather is looking like. They say rain overnight into the morning. I hope we get it in.

Murphy, who started the second round two shots behind Hines, tied the score when she parred the first three holes at Green Acres.

After turning with a 44 compared to Hines' 45, Murphy was still within one stroke of Hines until back-to-back triple bogeys on holes 11 and 12 derailed what was a promising round.

Murphy's approach shot came out of a fairway bunker on the par-4 11th hole and went straight into a hazard, resulting in a triple bogey. Then she hit her tee shot on the par-3 12th hole into a pond, leading to another triple bogey, falling six strokes behind the leader.

Murphy birdied two holes over the final six to get within four shots of Hines, giving her a realistic chance to claim her first UCWGA title in Sunday's final round at Wiltwyck.

If I can keep my drives in the fairway, I play much better at Wiltwyck," Murphy said. "If I hit it into the rough, it usually takes me an extra shot.

With the UCWGA field teeing off in a noon shotgun start on Sunday, Myers is hopeful to finish the 54-hole tournament. But if the round is called at any point after the completion of nine holes by all competitors, Myers said the tournament would be cut to 45 holes, with whoever was ahead at that point being declared the champion.

Results of the 67th Ulster County Women’s Golf Association (UCWGA) Championship after Saturday's second round at the par-72 Green Acres Golf Course in Kingston:

Championship flight

Kim Hines 83-91-174

Kathy Murphy 85-93-178

Kristen Osterhoudt 88-92-180

Diane Myers 88-96-184

Frances Murphy 91-93-184

Yvonne Merck 95-97-192

Ellen Densen 102-92-194

Diana Decker Kuster 104-94-198

Marianne Albamont 105-98-203

Hannah Murphy 97-107-204

Christine Wesserling 103-105-208

Joann Burns 115-131-246

First flight

Madison Paddock 90

Linda Depuy 104

Jaime Paddock 107

Colleen Martin 112

Marge Bennett 119

© 2025 Daily Freeman, Kingston, N.Y. Visit www.newsrealtime . Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

6 Causes of Dilated Pupils

Medically reviewed by Andrew Greenberg, MD

Dilated pupils ( Mydriasis ) occur when the pupils open larger than usual. This normally happens in darker lighting to allow more light into the eye, but dilated pupils can also indicate an underlying medical condition or injury.

Jump to Key Takeaways .

1. Prescription and Over-the-Counter Medications

Various prescription and over-the-counter (OTC) medications can cause changes in pupil size due to their effect on the muscles that control them.

Mydriatics are dilating eye drops and are designed specifically to enlarge the pupil so eye doctors can examine the eye for injury or disease.

Other forms of medication that contain anticholinergics , which are drugs that block the neurotransmitter acetylcholine , can also lead to changes in pupil size. Some anticholinergics that cause pupil changes include:

  • Antihistamines
  • Dramamine (dimenhydrinate)
  • Sudafed (pseudoephedrine) or other decongestants
  • Stimulants
  • Tricyclic antidepressants
  • Antipsychotics
  • Medications used to treat Parkinson's disease
  • Anti-seizure medications
  • Atropine
  • Drugs with botulinum toxin
  • Antispasmodics

2. Substance Use

Using non-prescribed or illicit substances can also lead to eye issues, including dilated pupils. Drugs that have been linked to pupil dilation include:

  • Alcohol
  • Morphine
  • Heroin
  • Methadone
  • Hydrocodone
  • Oxycodone
  • Pentazocine
  • Fentanyl
  • Cocaine
  • Methamphetamines
  • Cyclazodone
  • 4-Methylaminorex
  • Lysergic acid diethylamide (LSD)
  • Psilocybin
  • Phencyclidine (angel dust)
  • Mescaline
  • Large doses of barbiturates
  • Marijuana

3. Medical Conditions

Certain medical conditions may be responsible for pupil dilation. They can include:

  • Adie's syndrome , a rare neurological disorder
  • Microvascular cranial nerve palsy (MCNP), which is when blood flow is blocked to the eye nerves
  • Migraines or side effects of migraines, such as benign episodic unilateral mydriasis (BEUM), which is when one pupil is dilated
  • Lambert-Eaton myasthenic syndrome (LEMS)
  • Neurosyphilis , or late-stage syphilis
  • Viral encephalitis , or brain swelling caused by a viral infection
  • Psychological conditions, including psychopathy and bipolar disorder
  • Strokes
  • Tumors

4. Psychological Factors

Both positive and negative emotional or mental stimuli can cause the pupil to dilate as an involuntary response. For example, people often experience larger pupils when they become aroused or during periods of high mental effort.

This could be anything from seeing someone you find attractive to having to think hard about something.

5. Eye Injuries

Dilated pupils are also common if you damage your eye, specifically the iris , which is the colored part of the eye. This level of trauma can occur after a force hits the eye or through chemical injury.

In addition to pupil dilation, a person may also experience changes in vision or blindness following an eye injury

6. Brain Injuries

Injuries to the brain that cause intracranial pressure to rise can lead to pupil dilation if the pressure is placed on the nerves inside the iris. In some cases, only one pupil can be dilated after a brain injury, while in others, both pupils will be dilated.

How Is the Cause of Dilated Pupils Diagnosed?

Because dilated pupils can indicate that something is wrong, it's crucial to see a healthcare provider if you notice changes in how your pupils dilate in the absence of changing light conditions and are unsure of the cause.

A healthcare provider can look for the underlying cause of dilated pupils. Typically, a healthcare provider conducts an eye exam and collects a health history, current symptoms, and other relevant information to determine the next steps in the diagnostic process.

What Treatment Might Be Given?

Treating pupil dilation will be heavily dependent on what is causing it. For example:

  • If your pupils are dilated after an eye exam because of eye drops, you will not require treatment.
  • If due to a medication or substance, a healthcare provider can determine the next steps in assessing other side effects and whether a prescription or treatment change is needed or substance use treatment is recommended.
  • If they are dilated because you have a head injury, you will likely need emergency care to address the trauma.

Key Takeaways

  • Pupils naturally dilate in low light to allow more light into the eye, and also due to emotional or mental stimuli.
  • Other causes of dilated pupils include medications given during an eye exam, various prescribed, over-the-counter, and illicit medications, traumatic brain injury, and various other medical conditions.
  • If you can't easily explain your dilated pupils, see a healthcare provider.

Read the original article on Verywell Health

Sacramento's cat-loving community hosts Caturday in Land Park

Cat lovers from across Sacramento gathered at William Land Regional Park on Saturday for Caturday, a community-organized event for residents to meet and greet with other feline fanatics.

Organized by resident Danielle Keaton, the event aims to help cat owners from the area meet each other. Keaton is the cat parent of Angel, and she has been organizing Caturday since 2022.

I like hosting events, and I have a lot of cat crazy friends who are already taking their cats out," Keaton said. "So I was like, 'hey, why don't we just, like, get together at the park?'

Located in a quiet corner of Freeport and 13th Street in Land Park, cats of all ages and sizes were playing with cat toys, sniffing one another, or sleeping in their respective carriers. As Keaton looked upon the dozens of cats sitting on picnic blankets and walked across the park in harnesses, she remarked that she would "die for any of these kitties."

Among the cat owners was 6-year-old Sloane Santos, who wore fluffy purple cat ears and snacked on cat-shaped cookies. Sloane Santos owns Farmey, an orange cat who is "more fluff than cat," said Adrian Santos, father of Sloane Santos.

Farmey was adopted from the Sacramento County Bradshaw Animal Shelter three years ago, and her favorite playmate is the family's yellow lab, Ruby.

"My favorite thing is I like when the tail brushes against the window and when she rides it long on the porch," said Sloane Santos.

"Farmey is a social cat," Adrian Santos said. Currently, the family is trying to train her to go paddleboarding with them. But while Farmey has a social attitude, it has been hard for the family to find outings to take her on. So when they found out about Caturday, they knew it would be perfect, they said.

As a dog and the cat family, there are way more events for dogs out there. Dogs are very social," said Adrian Santos. "So meeting other cat owners at an event like this is really cool. It's a different type of bond.

Will Smith, a midtown resident, took his two 1-year-old cats, Persephone and Louie, to Caturday. The two usually join him on his weekend outings at the downtown farmer's market from inside Smith's backpack.

Despite the notion that cats have an anti-social nature, many of the residents remarked that they frequently take their cats on walks with a harness. One resident, Taryn Davis, was being led by her cat, Steak, a gray tortoiseshell cat. She said that she and Steak will take walks along the river in West Sacramento because the cat "loves nature."

She's really into, like, looking at squirrels and birds," Davis said. "And if I'm not home and it's like nighttime, I'll put on bird TV for her.

Cats are classified as facultatively social animals, which means they prefer to live in both solitary settings and social environments, often switching between the two, according to the IAABC Foundation Journal .

Michelle Woodbury described her 18-year-old cat, Teloola, as a "super personable love bug," who has been harness trained since she was 6 months old. Woodbury said Caturday has been a fun way to meet other cats and cat owners within Sacramento. She added that Caturday has helped those interested in adopting a cat, but remain unsure, become familiar with interacting with a feline.

"Getting out to do this shows people that people won't look at you that weird, if you train your cat, or get a stroller and take him out and get him some fresh air," Woodbury said. "They like fresh air just as much as the rest of us."

5 standouts from Day 4 of Patriots training camp practice

The New England Patriots We are back out on the practice field for Day 4 of training camp on Saturday. There was a greater intensity with this session following Friday's walkthrough practice.

This was no mere dink and dunk session in the competitive periods between the offense and defense. Quarterback Drake Maye didn't have his strongest practice of the year, but he did air the ball out more than once, resulting in a couple of major highlight reel plays .

With that said, the offense ran into trouble against the defense in this game. Maye missed some throws, and the offensive line struggled in pass protection. It has looked like a game of musical chairs along the offensive front, and the Patriots are hoping they can have a more stable core before the start of the season.

Here were the top five standouts from Day 4 of training camp:

WR Demario Douglas

Demario Douglas was heating up at practice on Saturday with multiple highlight-reel catches, including a 50-yard bomb for a touchdown and a beautiful reception over cornerback Marcus Jones, where he high-pointed the ball.

There has been so much talk about Stefon Diggs and Kyle Williams that people have seemingly forgotten about Douglas, who should be even better in Josh McDaniels' offense. His growing connection with Drake Maye could ultimately lead to a breakout season.

S Jabrill Peppers

Safety Jabrill Peppers let a potential Drake Maye interception slip through his fingers earlier in camp. He didn't make the same mistake twice when coming up with a tip drill interception from linebacker Jack Gibbens against backup quarterback Joshua Dobbs. There is no question that Peppers is a difference-maker when he's on the field. He's one of those players who consistently seems to be in the right place at the right time.

WR Javon Baker

After three quiet practices, Javon Baker finally broke out by hauling in a 60-yard touchdown reception from Drake Maye. The second-year wideout beat veteran safety Jaylinn Hawkins badly with a double move and made one of the most impressive plays of the day in seven-on-sevens. Whether he keeps that momentum going the rest of the way or not remains to be seen.

EDGE Keion White

Keion White has been a constant disruptive force along the defensive front through the first week of training camp. He was at it again on Saturday with two would-be sacks. Rookie offensive tackle Will Campbell has held his own in the head-to-head matchups, but it will be fun to see that competition when the pads finally come on Monday.

RB TreVeyon Henderson

Rookie running back TreVeyon Henderson looked solid catching passes out of the offensive backfield. His speed and receiving skills are going to be real weapons for offensive coordinator Josh McDaniels. Receivers struggled to separate in New England throughout the 2024 season. If that somehow remains the case in 2025, Henderson is a real mismatch that the Patriots should be able to use to their advantage.

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This article originally appeared on Patriots Wire: 5 standouts from Day 4 of Patriots training camp practice

Disney World expert shares 6 things people are doing wrong at the Florida resort

A Disney enthusiast has shared essential tips for travelers flying out to the land of Mickey Mouse and friends.

Disney World is a major tourist destination in Orlando, Florida , with many different parks to explore. The park had 48 million visitors in 2023, making it one of the most attended amusement parks in the U.S.

Given that a Disney adventure can be quite the splurge—and possibly a once-in-a-lifetime event—Hannah Westphal from byHannah Vacations is spilling the beans on six mistakes you'll want to avoid at the most magical place on Earth.

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Overdressing

Hannah warns against going overboard with your outfit choices, noting: "It's easy to forget, but comfortable shoes are essential for a fantastic Disneyland trip. High heels, flip-flops, and brand-new shoes might not be the best choice after a day of exploring rides and soaking up the magic."

Spending too much time at a restaurant

Then there's the temptation to linger over lunch. Despite the tempting array of Disney dining options, Hannah advises to find a balance between eating and enjoying the attractions.

She points out, "If you're short on time exploring the parks, a long, leisurely meal might not be the best way to spend your day."

"It's a shame to see visitors feeling deflated after a lovely meal, only to find they've squeezed themselves out of time for their top ride."

The expert recommends that guests should either set aside dedicated time for dining or choose quick bites to maximize their park experience. For those curious about food costs, Disney World has conveniently posted all its dining establishments online, including price ranges and complete menus.

Not using the Disney Experience app

To elevate your magical adventure, visitors can download the Disney Experience app, which experts call a "fantastic tool" for your visit. Unfortunately, many guests don't take full advantage of its capabilities.

"The app provides everything you need to know, from current ride wait times to character meet-and-greets and show schedules," Hannah said. You can even view your PhotoPass photos and ride pictures, keep your park ticket handy on the app, and order food to save time queuing.

Nevertheless, the expert recommends downloading the app and creating your account in advance. This approach allows you to familiarize yourself with its features before your arrival, saving valuable park time for what matters most - experiencing the magic.

Standing in line for treats

Nothing's more frustrating than getting hungry while trapped in an endless queue for snacks at Disney World (or while waiting for an attraction). Luckily for visitors, there's a handy trick to avoid those tedious waits - pre-order your treats.

Disney World has come a long way from its early days, now offering a level of convenience that might surprise many. Visitors can pre-order snacks and drinks via the app, bypassing the lines and freeing up more time for fun on the rides.

Hannah explained: "Just place your order and pay through the app. Once you get a notification that your food is ready to collect, you can stop by and pick it up."

Watching fireworks inside the park

When it comes to the nightly fireworks display, a favorite among park-goers, Hannah warned about the typically large crowds that gather to watch. While the experience inside the park is immersive, those who prefer a quieter setting can find tranquil spots outside for their own enchanting moment.

"While the fireworks are stunning from within the park, you might find yourself feeling a bit overwhelmed by the crowds," she noted. "For a more relaxed experience, you might want to consider alternative viewing spots outside the park."

Not exploring beyond the rides

Hannah also pointed out that Disney parks offer much more than just rides; they are full of amazing performances by talented cast members. She encourages visitors not to overlook these experiences simply because the thrill rides seem like the main attraction.

Hannah added: "In my opinion, it wouldn't be a good idea to miss a fantastic show just for the sake of a short ride with a long wait."

She recommends guests fully enjoy the parades, spectacular evening shows, and captivating daily events that only Disney parks can provide.

For the latest local news and features on Irish America, visit our homepage here .

Denny Hamlin gives explanation for expensive NASCAR crash after two-word verdict

Denny Hamlin shed light on what exactly caused his costly mistake during NASCAR Cup Series qualifying for the Brickyard 400.

On Thursday, Hamlin - who recently made a final decision on his future with Joe Gibbs Racing after winning last week's Autotrader EchoPark Automotive 400 - suffered a big hit on his qualifying lap at Indianapolis Motor Speedway.

While pushing his car to the limit, Hamlin slapped the outside wall in Turn 2 and damaged his right rear toe-link - causing the No. 11 Toyota to spin out at the entry of the backstretch and slam hard into the inside wall.

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Hamlin was over two-tenths of a second faster than the pole time before the scary collision, but will now have to race on Sunday from P39 driving a backup car. On social media, he revealed what went wrong by bluntly writing: "Over send."

Speaking to reporters moments after being released from the infield care center, Hamlin admitted that he had little time to react before realizing something was about to go wrong. "I saw that other guys had issues there and the wind picked up, which made for some pretty tight conditions off of Turn 2," he explained. "And so if you're not pointing correctly, it's not going to turn. I wasn't pointing correctly."

Given the fact that he crashed out in the early stages of qualifying, Hamlin admitted that he was unable to get a firm understanding of how his car was performing. "Yeah, I don't know. It bounces okay," Hamlin noted. "I didn't get a couple of corners on it. The car was great in practice. Obviously, we'll just have to fix the backup."

Hamlin has achieved no lack of success this season , accumulating 11 top-10 finishes, 10 top-5s and four race wins over 20 events. Looking ahead to the Brickyard 400, however, the 44-year-old expressed little confidence that he would be able to dig himself out of the hole he had dug.

Just try to do the best I can," Hamlin said about his mindset. "There's nothing I can do to change the outcome for tomorrow. Just give it the best I can, try to get all the points I can. Stage points are probably nearly impossible from where we're starting. We just have to try to get the best finish.

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All hope is not lost for Hamlin considering the fact that Ross Chastain emerged victorious in this year's Coca-Cola 600 despite starting in last place at Charlotte Motor Speedway - thereby becoming the first driver to win the event after beginning at the back of the field.

Upon being reminded of Chastian's heroics, Hamlin asserted that the situation he currently finds himself in is far different. "Apples and oranges," Hamlin said. "Two different tracks. A lot more passing at Charlotte than this track. A lot of different distance. Obviously, we'll have to have some big breaks go our way."

Radio Martí is alive and well and broadcasting to Cuba from Miami. Here's how | Opinion

On March 26, the Office of Cuba Broadcasting, which oversees Radio and TV Martí reopened its doors amid a sweeping transformation of its parent agency, the U.S. Agency for Global Media (USAGM)

Faced with staffing limitations, we recommitted ourselves to our core mission: delivering timely, accurate, and uncensored information to the Cuban people.

OCB is not just a media organization - it is a lifeline to truth for millions living under authoritarian control. What we achieved in the weeks that followed is a testament to our team's dedication and to the enduring value of public service journalism.

Here's how we did it:

Through careful analysis of audience patterns and programming needs, we realigned our content schedules to focus on high-impact time blocks.

Our review of staff roles allowed us to reassign tasks more efficiently, and we adjusted work shifts to ensure full coverage with fewer hands. We relaunched Radio Martí with a dynamic, 24-hour format featuring original programming, trusted newscasts and curated evergreen content.

Our technical and production teams were restructured and unified under a single editorial and operational vision. Since March, we have done more than resume operations - we have innovated. We launched State Affairs – State Affairs in partnership with the U.S. State Department's Media Hub of the Americas, bringing direct and transparent diplomatic insights to the Cuban public.

Our collaboration with Trinity Audio, an AI-powered text-to-speech tool, exceeded 1.5 million plays in one year - clear proof of growing demand for our content.

On May 20, we marked the 40th anniversary of Radio Martí. The celebration drew broad support: Miami U.S. Rep. Congressman Carlos Giménez submitted the date into the Congressional Record and Miami-Dade County issued an official proclamation delivered by Commissioner Juan Carlos "JC" Bermúdez.

We premiered two short documentaries that reflect the spirit of resistance and the enduring demand for freedom among Cubans. "Ferrer, Portrait of a Dissident" chronicles over 20 years of activism by José Daniel Ferrer, one of the island's most prominent opposition figures.

"Ramón Saúl Sánchez and His Struggle" highlights the tireless work of the well-known Cuban exile leader and advocate for human rights and democratic change. Both films serve not only as tributes to individual courage but also as reminders of a broader movement that continues to push for liberty - on and off the island.

We also resumed shortwave broadcasting to Cuba. On June 27, transmissions from the Edward R. Murrow Transmitting Station in North Carolina returned broadcasting on three frequencies. This expanded reach is more than a technical achievement - it is a moral obligation to ensure our signal breaks through censorship barriers.

Since the start of FY 2025, OCB has recorded over 622 million video views on Facebook, with 223.7 million meeting the 3-second industry engagement standard, and 65% of those views coming from Cuba.

Our efforts are reaching people inside Cuba. In June alone, Facebook videos reached 100.7 million views, including 35.5 million 3-second views. On YouTube, we recorded 1.6 million views in June, with 51.3% of that audience in Cuba. Overall, YouTube has reached 19.4 million views this fiscal year, with 52% originating from within the island. These figures are verified by Meta Business Suite's Professional Dashboard.

None of this would have been possible without the consistent support of Cuban American elected officials who have fiercely defended OCB's mission.

In President Donald Trump's National Security Memorandum, OCB's role was explicitly reaffirmed as a key component of the renewed Cuba Internet Task Force, charged with expanding online access to the Cuban population. That designation was not symbolic - it was strategic. The ability to inform, connect and empower a society isolated from the world begins with access to truth. OCB remains a vital actor in that effort.

OCB has proven that with purpose, resilience and innovation, we can achieve extraordinary results. Our mission remains clear: to be a trusted source of information for Cubans, a platform for the voiceless and a force against censorship.

Alvaro Alba is the deputy director of the Office of Cuba Broadcasting. Click here to listen to Radio Marti online.

'We love you, Cincinnati.' Ice Cube crashes 2025 Music Fest, introduces Earth, Wind & Fire

The Cincinnati Music Festival returned to Paycor Stadium on July 25, bringing the Queen City another night full of unforgettable performances.

Funk, soul and R&B legends, including Earth, Wind & Fire, Anthony Hamilton, Jazmine Sullivan and more, had the crowd on their feet as they took over the Bengals' field Friday night.

Dayton's very own Zapp Band kicked off the show by proving to audiences that "ain't no party like a Zapp Band party." Then, Maroon 5 keyboardist PJ Morton hit the stage doing what he does best: tickling the ivories while crooning to some soulful tunes.

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The Cincinnati Music Festival then transformed into Ladies Night when powerhouse R&B vocalist Jazmine Sullivan graced the stage. Sullivan's signature raspy voice riled up all the scorned women in the stadium as she sang about love, heartbreak and revenge.

Earth, Wind & Fire, dubbed the "greatest band in the world" by Sullivan, brought the house down with their eclectic fusion of soul and funk sounds supported by their approximately nine-person ensemble as fireworks from Great American Ball Park lit up the skies.

For the grand finale, singer, songwriter and actor Anthony Hamilton turned the dial down a few notches with a seemingly endless medley of southern R&B fitting for the festival's sophisticated, older crowd.

The festivities continue at Paycor Stadium on July 26, with headliner LL Cool J and special guest Toni Braxton. But before then, here are the highlights from night two of the 2025 Cincinnati Music Festival .

Cincinnati Music Festival 2025: 5 biggest moments from Paycor Stadium's July 25 show

Ain't no party like a Zapp Band party

The Zapp Band had the stadium pumped up for night two of the Cincinnati Music Festival, energizing the crowd with its unique voice-box technofunk sound and matching light-up suits.

The Dayton band, which became famous in the 1970s, filled its set with a variety of theatrics and gimmicks that thoroughly entertained me. Their performance included multiple costume changes, a harmonica solo, surprise backup dancers dressed as referees, a quick sermon and moment of silence, and an homage to "California Love" by Tupac Shakur, which samples the band's 1982 hit "Dance Floor" and founding member Roger Troutman's 1981 song "So Ruff, So Tuff," according to Genius .

And they did it all while grooving to the band's futuristic synth hits such as "Computer Love," "More Bounce to the Ounce," and "I Want to Be Your Man." The only thing missing was a surprise performance from Cincinnati's own master of funk, Bootsy Collins .

Near the end of their set, the pioneering funk band thanked the Queen City for showing them some love, saying, "Cincinnati knows how to party."

They also told the crowd to make so much noise that they'll "hear you all the way up in Toledo."

PJ Morton takes audiences to church during night two of the Cincinnati Music Festival

Morton is more than just the keyboardist for pop band Maroon 5. He is also a five-time Grammy-winning singer, songwriter and record producer, which he more than proved to audiences on July 25, while playing a variety of original R&B songs and a few Gospel covers.

Morton talked about winning his fifth Grammy award in 2024 for his song "Good Morning" featuring Susan Carol, which he proceeded to perform live. He also reminisced about collaborating with his hero Stevie Wonder in 2013 on a song called "Only One," which he encapsulated with a performance of the modern classic.

He then closed out his set by singing a powerful duet and engaging in a little vocal sparring with background singer Jazmin Crumley.

Jazmine Sullivan sings to all the scorned ladies at Paycor Stadium

Jazmine Sullivan might have been the only female headliner for the festival on July 25, but the "Insecure" singer made sure that the women in the audience felt represented through her performance.

Sullivan, known for her deep, raspy voice, wide vocal range and emotionally raw lyrics, explored themes of love, revenge, self-worth, male validation and breaking the cycle of acceptance, while performing a compilation of her biggest hits, including "10 Seconds," "Bust Your Windows," "Need U Bad," "Pick Up Your Feelings," "In Love with Another Man," "Lions, Tigers & Bears," "Girl Like Me" featuring H.E.R. and more.

Sullivan's unique blend of contemporary R&B, soul, gospel and reggae influences gave quiet storm , late-night radio vibes, especially as a vibrant orange and red sunset transformed the upbeat evening into a moody night illuminated by smartphone flashlights.

Ice Cube makes a surprise appearance at the Cincinnati Music Festival to introduce Earth, Wind & Fire

Before Earth, Wind & Fire continued the "party in the Nati," legendary rapper and actor Ice Cube surprised fans by appearing on stage to introduce the six-time Grammy-winning band . His unexpected appearance also served as a promotion for his Big3 basketball league , which is scheduled to play games at Heritage Bank Center on July 26, the last night of the Cincinnati Music Festival .

I want to thank everybody for supporting, first of all, supporting me for 40 years in the business," the rapper said. "We love you, Cincinnati. Thank you for hosting the Big3. Thank you for supporting the homeboy Ice Cube. Thank you, P&G. We love y'all.

After Ice Cube welcomed the legendary Chicago band on stage, the nine-member ensemble launched into a non-stop medley of soul and funk jams, including "September," "Fantasy," "Shining Star," "Let's Groove," "That's the Way of the World," "Boogie Wonderland," and more.

During their set, Earth, Wind & Fire electrified the crowd once again and had people boogying for what seemed like ages. Even I had to take a break from my diligent note-taking to butcher a couple of verses from my favorite song, "Reasons."

After more than five decades in the music industry, Earth, Wind & Fire is still one of the best-selling R&B bands of all time, according to the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame , and it's not hard to imagine why.

Although Earth, Wind & Fire was the penultimate act of the night, in my opinion, their performance was the highlight of the festival. The group danced and sang on stage like it was the '70s again (even though many of the band's senior members are in their mid-70s).

Their masterful performance, full of energy and theatrics, had fans of all ages on their feet, proving that no matter how old you are, you can still get your groove on.

As I sat high in the nosebleed seats with the summer breeze and soulful melodies wafting over me, I found myself agreeing with a statement my mother, Gina Ogwude, often repeated throughout my childhood when playing Earth, Wind & Fire (her favorite band of all time).

"This is when music was good."

Anthony Hamilton almost put me to sleep, but in a good way

Praising himself as the "narrator of love," Anthony Hamilton's performance at Paycor Stadium was the embodiment of a late-night radio show. His sultry, deep voice, endless vocal loops and comments to the crowd about "slowing things down" almost put me to sleep, but in a good way, I suppose.

I must admit I was not an Anthony Hamilton fan before his performance at CMF. I only knew his 2003 hit "Charlene" before he took over the stage. Honestly, I can't say that I'll be running to turn on the neo-soul singer's music in the future.

But for one night, I was taken away by his hypnotic R&B tunes and calming stage presence. After a long night on my feet, I welcomed the brief reprieve as Hamilton gently lulled me into a blissful daze with his gravelly, southern sound.

This article originally appeared on Cincinnati Enquirer: "We love you, Cincinnati." Ice Cube crashes 2025 Music Fest, introduces Earth, Wind & Fire