Dustin May's perfect game bid broken up in Dodgers' sweep of White SoxNew Foto - Dustin May's perfect game bid broken up in Dodgers' sweep of White Sox

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Dustin May pitched two-run ball over seven innings after retiring the first 16 batters and the Los Angeles Dodgers beat the Chicago White Sox 6-2 on Thursday night to complete a three-game sweep. The 27-year-old right-hander struck out a season-high nine and walked one in the best start of his six-year major league career. He won for the first time since June 15 against San Francisco. Brooks Baldwin broke up May's perfect game bid with a single in the sixth and then chased May (5-5) with a two-run homer in the eighth, ending the longest outing of his career. May left to a standing ovation. Freddie Freeman went 2 for 4 with three RBIs and a run scored. He was robbed of a homer by Mike Tauchman, who leaned over the lower wall in right field and snagged the ball in the fifth. Mookie Betts homered for the first time in 21 games, his solo shot off Tyler Gilbert extending the lead to 6-0 in the seventh. The White Sox fell to 9-35 on the road, setting a record for the worst start in franchise history. They were already the worst away from home in the majors. Key moment The Dodgers backed May with stellar defense. Left fielder Michael Conforto made a feet-first sliding catch of a sinking line drive by former Dodger Miguel Vargas leading off the fifth. Freeman snared a liner to first base leading off the sixth before Baldwin's single to right broke up May's perfect game bid. Key stats May retired the leadoff hitter in each of the first seven innings. The White Sox got swept by the Dodgers for the second consecutive season. Up next White Sox RHP Adrian Houser (3-2, 1.90 ERA) starts Friday's series opener at Denver. Dodgers RHP Ben Casparius (6-2, 3.97) takes the mound Friday against Houston's Lance McCullers Jr. ___ AP MLB:https://apnews.com/hub/mlb

Dustin May's perfect game bid broken up in Dodgers' sweep of White Sox

Dustin May's perfect game bid broken up in Dodgers' sweep of White Sox LOS ANGELES (AP) — Dustin May pitched two-run ball over seven...
Trump says he'll host a UFC fight on White House grounds next yearNew Foto - Trump says he'll host a UFC fight on White House grounds next year

Get ready to see some punches on the White House grounds. President Trump says he will host a UFC mixed martial arts fight at the White House as part of next year's festivities celebrating 250 years of American independence. The idea came up during a Thursday night speech at the Iowa State Fairgrounds, one year and one day before the 250th anniversary of the 1776 ratification of the Declaration of Independence. The federal government is planning to mark the occasion with a year's worth of events — including a UFC fight, according to Mr. Trump. "We're going to have some incredible events," the president said. "Some professional events, some amateur events. But the UFC fight is going to be a big deal, too." Further details on the event, which is not lacking for possible names (the Rose Garden Fight Night? Oval Office Octagon?), are unclear. But the president is "dead serious" about the idea, White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt told a pool reporter on Thursday. A UFC spokesperson also confirmed the plans to CBS News. Mr. Trump described it as a "championship fight, full fight" with 20,000 or 25,000 spectators — a tall order for the White House grounds, though Mr. Trump said, "we have a lot of land there." He said longtime UFC CEO Dana White will organize the event. "It's going to be EPIC!" wroteLeavitt on X. The president's ties to the UFC go back to at least 2001, when the Trump Taj Mahal casino in Atlantic Cityhostedthe mixed martial arts enterprise. Since then, Mr. Trumphas periodicallyattended UFC fights, includinglast month. The president is also close with White, who helped introduce Mr. Trump at last summer's Republican National Convention and took the stage at Mr. Trump's election night victory party. Mr. Trump plugged a handful of other America250 events in his Thursday speech, including a "Great American State Fair," a National Mall celebration and an athletic competition called the "Patriot Games." "I think it's going to be a wild time," Mr. Trump told reporters after returning to the D.C. area following the speech. Bryan Kohberger Pleads Guilty | "48 Hours" Podcast CBS News journalists describe what it was like to report on Sean "Diddy" Combs trial Skydiving plane crashes in New Jersey, several hospitalized

Trump says he'll host a UFC fight on White House grounds next year

Trump says he'll host a UFC fight on White House grounds next year Get ready to see some punches on the White House grounds. President T...
Pasquantino hits two-run single in 7th inning as Royals beat Mariners 3-2New Foto - Pasquantino hits two-run single in 7th inning as Royals beat Mariners 3-2

SEATTLE (AP) — Vinnie Pasquantino had a two-run single in the seventh inning and the Kansas City Royals beat the Seattle Mariners 3-2 on Thursday night. Bobby Witt Jr. tied the score 1-1 with a single to center field with one out and then stole second base to put two runners in scoring position. Pasquantino grounded a single to right field drive in both runners, with Witt scoring aftermaking an elusive move to avoid the tag from catcher Cal Raleighto give the Royals a two-run lead. Seth Lugo (6-5) allowed just one run on six hits in 6 1/3 innings. He walked two and struck out seven. Lucas Erceg and Taylor Clarke got two outs each, and Carlos Estévez pitched 1 1/3 innings to get his 24th save. Estévez gave up a leadoff homer to Dominic Canzone in the ninth and had runners on second and third after a wild pitch with one out, but struck out Julio Rodríguez and got Raleigh to ground out to end the game. Jorge Polanco homered in the fourth inning to put the Mariners up 1-0, and also had two doubles,. Logan Evans, recalled from Triple-A Tacoma, made his first big league start since May 10 and gave up three hits in 5 2/3 scoreless innings. He walked one and struck out three. Casey Legumina (4-4) walked the first two batters to begin the seventh inning and was replaced by Carlos Vargas, who gave up the run-scoring hits to Witt and Pasquantino. Key moment The Royals capitalized on consecutive walks by Kyle Isbel and Jonathan India against Legumijna to start the seventh, setting the stage for Witt and Pasquantino. Key stat Witt has now hit safely in his last 23 road games, breaking Hal McRae's 42-year-old Kansas City record. Up next Royals LHP Kris Bubic (6-6, 2.25 ERA) opens a three-game series at Arizona against Diamondbacks LHP Eduardo Rodriguez (3-4, 5.13). Mariners RHP Bryan Woo (7-4, 2.93 ERA) faces Pirates LHP Bailey Falter (7-4, 2.93). ___ AP MLB:https://www.apnews.com/hub/MLB

Pasquantino hits two-run single in 7th inning as Royals beat Mariners 3-2

Pasquantino hits two-run single in 7th inning as Royals beat Mariners 3-2 SEATTLE (AP) — Vinnie Pasquantino had a two-run single in the seve...
The Baha'i faith is small, far-flung, and faced with repression in parts of the Middle EastNew Foto - The Baha'i faith is small, far-flung, and faced with repression in parts of the Middle East

The Baha'i faith —a small but global religionwith an interfaith credo — fits comfortably into the religious spectrum of most countries. In several Middle East nations, however, Baha'i followers face repression that is drawing criticism from human rights groups. The abuse is most evident in Iran, which bans the faith and has been widely accused ofpersecuting its adherents, human rights advocates say. They also report systemic discrimination in Yemen, Qatar and Egypt. Iran has been a driving force in the spread of anti-Baha'i repression in countries where it holds influence, advocates say — a plan first made public in a leaked 1991 government document. These include Yemen, where Iran backs Houthi rebels who control much of the country, and Qatar, where links include co-ownership of theworld's largest natural gas field. "The sheer arsenal the Iranian government has expended to crush the Baha'is in every avenue of life has been astronomical," said Nazila Ghanea, an Oxford University law professor and U.N. Special Rapporteur on religious freedom. "It has also extended its reach, time and again, beyond the border of Iran," she said. Anti-Baha'i discrimination includes forced deportations and family separations, as well as denial of marriage licenses, public school enrollment and access to burial grounds. In Qatar, the leader of the small Baha'i community has been detained since April. Remy Rowhani, 71, went on trial last month, charged with "promoting the ideology of a deviant sect" on the country's Baha'i social media account. A far-flung faith The Baha'i faith was founded in the 1860s by Baha'u'llah, a Persian nobleman considered a prophet by his followers. He taught that all religions represent progressive stages in the revelation of God's will, leading to the unity of all people and faiths. There are no Baha'i clergy. Communities are organized through elected local spiritual assemblies. From the faith's earliest days, it was denounced by Shiite Muslim clerics in what is now Iran; they considered followers apostates. That repression continued after Iran's 1979 Islamic Revolution, when many Baha'i followers were executed or went missing. There are less than 8 million believers worldwide, with the largest number in India. The faith is present in most countries. Michael Page of Human Rights Watch described Iran as "a guiding animus against Baha'is because it perceived them as antithetical to the regime's own interpretation of Shia Islam." "This is an authoritarian government that brutally cracks down on people who don't agree with it," Page told The Associated Press. "The hate speech directed at them is so at odds with the Baha'i faith tradition, it would feel laughable if the consequences weren't so serious." Not all Muslim countries are hostile. Saba Haddad, the Baha'i International Community's representative to the U.N. in Geneva, citedBahrain, the United Arab Emirates andTunisiaas welcoming. "We are the measure of tolerance — for any government, any country," she said. "We don't have any political stance, we don't interfere with politics, we don't have a Baha'i country. It's truly about ... tolerance and acceptance." Baha'i leader faces Qatar trial Rowhani has been detained since April 28 in whatHuman Rights Watch denouncesas a violation of religious freedom reflecting long-running discrimination against Baha'i believers. He faces up to three years in prison. His trial is recessed until Aug. 6. Rowhani's daughter, Noora Rowhani, who lives in Australia with her husband and 9-year-old daughter, said she hasn't been able to speak to her father since a brief call before his arrest. "As for why Qatar is doing this, I ask myself that every day," she told AP. "A country that brands itself as a leader on the world stage, hosting global conferences andsporting events, cannot justify the quiet targeting of its citizens … just because they belong to a different faith." Qatar's International Media Office didn't respond to an AP email seeking comment about Rowhani's case or accusations of systemic abuse of Baha'i followers. Rowhani — former head of Qatar's Chamber of Commerce — was jailed twice before, accused of offenses like routine fundraising related to his leadership of Qatar's Baha'i National Assembly. The latest charge involves the sect's X account, which contains posts about Qatari holidays and Baha'i writings. "These new charges highlight the lengths to which the authorities in Qatar are prepared to go to erase the Baha'is from their country," said lawyers Helena Kennedy and Steven Powles ofDoughty Street Chambers law firm— founded by British Prime Minister Keir Starmer — which is assisting in Rowhani's defense. Bias in Egypt and Yemen Since 1960, Egypt's government has denied legal recognition to its small Baha'i community. This includes denying marriage licenses and birth certificates, barring children from public schools and restricting where Baha'i families can bury their dead. The Baha'i International Community issued astatementin November decrying "intensification of the persecution." Egypt's Foreign Ministry didn't respond to AP queries about the accusations. In Yemen, 100-plus Baha'i followers have beendetained by Iranian-backed Houthirebels, according to Amnesty International. Keyvan Ghaderi, 52, was imprisoned for four years on charges including spying for the U.S. and Israel. He was released in 2020 and deported without being allowed to see his wife and children. Eventually, Ghaderi was granted a humanitarian visa to the U.S. He lives with his family in Salt Lake City. Ghaderi attributed the Houthis' animosity to fear of change. "They had this fear that we'd change ideas in Yemen, in the middle of civil war ... that we might change the narrative of young generations going to war," he said. ___ Associated Press religion coverage receives support through the AP'scollaborationwith The Conversation US, with funding from Lilly Endowment Inc. The AP is solely responsible for this content.

The Baha'i faith is small, far-flung, and faced with repression in parts of the Middle East

The Baha'i faith is small, far-flung, and faced with repression in parts of the Middle East The Baha'i faith —a small but global rel...
A year before declaring independence, colonists offered 'Olive Branch' petition to King George IIINew Foto - A year before declaring independence, colonists offered 'Olive Branch' petition to King George III

NEW YORK (AP) — Alarmed by the policies of PresidentDonald Trump, millions turned out last month for protests around the United States and overseas. Mindful of next year's 250th anniversary of American independence, organizers called the movement"No Kings." Had the same kind of rallies been called for in the summer of 1775, the response likely would have been more cautious. "It ('No Kings') was probably a minority opinion in July 1775," says H.W. Brands, a prize-winning scholar and chair of the history department at the University of Texas at Austin. "There was a lot of passion for revolution in New England, but that was different from the rest of the country," says Pulitzer Prize-winning historian Joseph Ellis. "There were still people who don't want to drawn into what they feared was an unnecessary war." This month marks the 250th anniversary — the semiquincentennial — of a document enacted almost exactly a year before the Declaration of Independence: "The Olive Branch Petition," ratified July 5, 1775 by the Continental Congress. Its primary author was John Dickinson, a Pennsylvanian whose writing skills led some to call him the "Penman of the Revolution," and would stand as a final, desperate plea to reconcile with Britain. They put forth a pre-revolutionary argument The notion of "No Kings" is a foundation of democracy. But over the first half of 1775 Dickinson and others still hoped that King George III could be reasoned with and would undo the tax hikes and other alleged abuses they blamed on the British Parliament and other officials. Ellis calls it the "Awkward Interval," when Americans had fought the British inLexington and Concordand around Bunker Hill, while holding off from a full separation. "Public opinion is changing during this time, but it still would have been premature to issue a declaration of independence," says Ellis, whose books include "Founding Brothers," "The Cause" and the upcoming "The Great Contradiction." The Continental Congress projected unity in its official statements. But privately, like the colonies overall, members differed. Jack Rakove, a professor of history at Stanford University and author of the Pulitzer Prize-winning "Original Meanings," noted that delegates to Congress ranged from "radicals" such as Samuel Adams who were avid for independence to such "moderates" as Dickinson and New York's John Jay. The Olive Branch resolution balanced references to "the delusive pretences, fruitless terrors, and unavailing severities" administered by British officials with dutiful tributes to shared ties and to the king's "royal magnanimity and benevolence." "(N)otwithstanding the sufferings of your loyal Colonists during the course of this present controversy, our Breasts retain too tender a regard for the Kingdom from which we derive our Origin to request such a Reconciliation as might in any manner be inconsistent with her Dignity or her welfare," the sometimes obsequious petition reads in part. The American Revolution didn't arise at a single moment but through years of anguished steps away from the "mother" country — a kind of weaning that at times suggested a coming of age, a young person's final departure from home. In letters and diaries written in the months before July 1775, American leaders often referred to themselves as children, the British as parents and the conflict a family argument. Edmund Pendleton, a Virginia delegate to the Continental Congress, urged "a reconciliation with Our mother Country." Jay, who would later help negotiate the treaty formally ending the Revolutionary War, proposed informing King George that "your majesty's American subjects" are "bound to your majesty by the strongest ties of allegiance and affection and attached to their parent country by every bond that can unite societies." In the Olive Branch paper, Dickinson would offer tribute to "the union between our Mother country and these colonies." An early example of 'peace through strength' The Congress, which had been formed the year before, relied in the first half of 1775 on a dual strategy that now might be called "peace through strength," a blend of resolve and compromise. John Adams defined it as "to hold the sword in one hand, the olive branch in the other." Dickinson's petition was a gesture of peace. A companion document, "The Declaration of the Causes and Necessity of Taking Up Arms," was a statement of resolve. The 1775 declaration was drafted by Thomas Jefferson, who a year later would be the principal writer of the Declaration of Independence, revised by Dickinson and approved by the Congress on July 6. The language anticipated the Declaration of Independence with its condemnation of the British for "their intemperate Rage for unlimited Domination" and its vows to "make known the Justice of our Cause." But while the Declaration of Independence ends with the 13 colonies "absolved from all Allegiance to the British Crown," the authors in 1775 assured a nervous public "that we mean not to dissolve that Union which has so long and so happily subsisted between us, and which we sincerely wish to see restored." "Necessity has not yet driven us into that desperate Measure, or induced us to excite any other Nation to war against them," they wrote. John Adams and Benjamin Franklin were among the peers of Dickinson who thought him naive about the British, and were unfazed when the king refused even to look at the Olive Branch petition and ruled that the colonies were in a state of rebellion. Around the same time Dickinson was working on his draft, the Continental Congress readied for further conflict. It appointed a commander of the newly-formed Continental Army, a renowned Virginian whom Adams praised as "modest and virtuous ... amiable, generous and brave." His name: George Washington. His ascension, Adams wrote, "will have a great effect, in cementing and securing the Union of these Colonies."

A year before declaring independence, colonists offered 'Olive Branch' petition to King George III

A year before declaring independence, colonists offered 'Olive Branch' petition to King George III NEW YORK (AP) — Alarmed by the po...

 

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