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Dozens walk out as Google boss Pichai addresses Stanford graduates



Some students were protesting against the company’s controversial work with the US government on artificial intelligence.



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Boy was 'play hunting' before fatal stabbing, court told



Boy, 16, goes on trial accused of murdering nine-year-old Aria Thorpe in Weston-super-Mare.



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Bonnie Tyler out of coma but 'very unwell' after emergency surgery



The Total Eclipse of the Heart singer was put in an induced coma after emergency intestinal surgery.



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5 California West Marine stores closing amid bankruptcy filing


West Marine, one of the nation’s largest boating and marine supplies retailers, is shutting down 59 stores across 23 states as they battle through Chapter 11 bankruptcy proceedings — including five locations in California.

The company filed for bankruptcy protection in May, citing “supply chain disruptions, extreme weather events, and shifts in consumer behavior” that left the retailer struggling to stay afloat. With inflation squeezing American wallets, boating and fishing spending appears to have sunk.

Among the hardest hit areas is the chain’s own birthplace in California, which is losing retail stores in Redding, Oceanside, Monterey, Pittsburg, and Chula Vista. Florida is taking the worst of the wreckage though, with eight store closures, and then Michigan losing six.


Exterior of a West Marine store.
Despite the sweeping closures, the company plans to continue operating almost 150 stores. Education Images/Universal Images Group via Getty Images

Company executives insisted that the chain is not going out of business completely, promising that the Chapter 11 filing is a restructuring move.

“The actions we are taking today will allow us to optimize our operations and rationalize our footprint, so that we can focus on continuing to serve our customers and community well into the future,” said Paulee Day, Chief Executive Officer of West Marine.

Despite the sweeping closures, the company plans to continue operating almost 150 stores, along with its website and mobile app, while working through proceedings.

It’s unclear how many employees will be affected, but they have stated that “obligations to employees including pay and current benefits” will be fulfilled.


Exterior view of the West Marine store with branded signage on a clear day in Newport Beach, California.
West Marine is also shuttering stores in New Jersey, New York and Ohio will lose three, Illinois, Maine, Massachusetts, North Carolina, Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana, Missouri, Nevada, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, Virginia and Wisconsin. Gado via Getty Images

Washington is losing five stores, Maryland and South Carolina are each down four stores.

West Marine is also shuttering stores in New Jersey, New York and Ohio will lose three, Illinois, Maine, Massachusetts, North Carolina, Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana, Missouri, Nevada, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, Virginia and Wisconsin.


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California’s newest congressman plots massive secession of rural areas to form new state: ‘Serious’



California’s newest congressman is reviving a push to carve out parts of the Golden State and create a brand-new state for residents who feel abandoned by Sacramento.

Rep. James Gallagher, who was sworn into Congress this month after winning a special election to represent California’s sprawling 1st Congressional District, said rural communities should “seriously consider” whether they want to remain part of California following the passing of the controversial redistricting measure known as Proposition 50.

“I think we have to seriously consider whether or not we want to continue as a part of a state like that, right? And that maybe we want our own self determination,” Gallagher said during an interview with KCRA’s Ashley Zavala.

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The Republican lawmaker argued the U.S. Constitution provides a path for new states to be formed and suggested the effort would begin with counties and local governments formally backing the idea before eventually seeking approval from both the California Legislature and Congress.

“I don’t think this is something that would happen overnight, but I do think it is something that should be a serious discussion,” Gallagher said when asked if he seeks to push for this at a national level. 

“If it continues to move forward, I think we do look at taking that next step,maybe it’s introducing some federal legislation providing for that federal consent,” he added.

Gallagher did not specify which counties could ultimately seek to leave California, though he said “six counties have already said that they do” support the concept and have signed onto a resolution he previously introduced.

The proposal echoes the decades-old “State of Jefferson” movement, an effort largely centered in far Northern California and southern Oregon that argues rural communities have been overshadowed by the state’s urban centers.

Getty Images/iStockphoto

Supporters of that movement have historically included residents in counties such as Modoc County, Lassen Countyand Siskiyou County, though it is not clear whether those are the same counties Gallagher now envisions joining a new state.

Many conservatives in those regions say they have long felt ignored by Sacramento and argue their interests — from water rights and timber revenues to wildlife management and agriculture — are routinely sacrificed in favor of policies crafted for coastal metropolitan areas.

The frustration has intensified in the wake of Proposition 50, a voter-approved measure that redrew congressional districts and, according to critics, diluted the voting power of rural Republican voters by pairing them with heavily Democratic areas around the Bay Area, including wealthy and liberal Marin County.

Gallagher framed the fight as one over representation.

Unlike earlier State of Jefferson proposals focused almost exclusively on the rural north, Gallagher’s plan drew an east-west divide that would have placed much of inland California — including portions of the conservative Inland Empire — into a separate state.

“When you are proposing to take away our very voice, our very ability to elect a person of our choice, when you put party over people, then I think we have to seriously consider whether or not we want to continue as a part of a state like that,” he said.

The congressman argued residents in Northern California, the Central Valley and the Inland Empire increasingly feel “overlooked and underrepresented” by state leaders.

“Many people in Northern California feel like we want something better than what we’ve been given,” Gallagher said. “And I think other people in this state as well, as I said, the Central Valley and the Inland Empire, for example, feel very overlooked and underrepresented by the state of California.”

He pointed to Democratic-backed environmental and economic policies — including restrictions on gas-powered vehicles, the extension of the state’s cap-and-trade program and resistance to suspending the gas tax — as evidence that Sacramento is out of touch with rural communities.

Getty Images

“That sort of obstinate attitude, arrogant attitude towards these parts of the state continues to this day, and it’s a problem,” Gallagher said.

The congressman’s embrace of secession predates his arrival in Washington.

While serving as Assembly Republican leader last year, Gallagher introduced a resolution that would have split California into two separate states.

Unlike earlier State of Jefferson proposals focused almost exclusively on the rural north, Gallagher’s plan drew an east-west divide that would have placed much of inland California — including portions of the conservative Inland Empire — into a separate state.

The measure was largely symbolic and had little chance of advancing in the Democrat-controlled Legislature, but it highlighted growing tensions between California’s urban centers and inland communities.

Shutterstock / Nick Fox

At a Sacramento news conference in August 2025, Gallagher said “forgotten people” in inland counties had lost their voice under the state’s Democratic supermajority.

He blasted then-Gov. Gavin Newsom over his redistricting plans, dubbing the effort a “Gavin-mander” and warning it would erase rural representation.

“Gavin, let my people go,” Gallagher declared.

Later that month, speaking at a rally protesting progressive legislation, Gallagher escalated his rhetoric further.

“Make no mistake, we are fighting tyranny here in California,” he told supporters. “We will never surrender our rights that are given by God. And if they do, we will do what we have to do to secure our liberty and to secure our rights into the future.”

California voters approved the mid-decade congressional redistricting plan to counter similar partisan redistricting efforts in Republican states like Texas to balance the gerrymandering, according to Newsom. David Buchan for Ca Post

California voters approved the mid-decade congressional redistricting plan to counter similar partisan redistricting efforts in Republican states like Texas to balance the gerrymandering, according to Newsom.

Whether Gallagher’s latest push gains traction remains to be seen.

Creating a new state would require approval from both the California Legislature and Congress — a politically daunting hurdle.

But for Gallagher and many of his supporters, the campaign appears to be as much about sending a message as it is about redrawing the map.



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Rare first edition of ‘Wuthering Heights’ with spelling mistakes is up for auction


LONDON — A rare first-edition copy of “ Wuthering Heights,” complete with spelling mistakes, is up for auction for the first time in more than a century, as Emily Brontë’s tragic, tempestuous romance gains new fans through a big-screen adaptation.

Christie’s auction house said Monday that it’s the first copy of the novel in the publisher’s original cloth binding to be auctioned since 1908. Only about 250 copies of the first edition were printed, and this one has been in a private library since shortly after its publication in 1847.

“The vast majority of surviving copies were rebound for collectors or libraries, meaning original cloth examples are now extremely scarce,” said Christie’s books and manuscripts specialist Mark Wiltshire.

Being sold along with a copy of sister Anne Brontë’s “Agnes Grey,” it’s expected to sell for between 400,000 pounds and 600,000 pounds ($540,000 and $800,000) at a June 30 auction in London. Both books carry the male pen names the sisters adopted to get published: Ellis Bell for Emily and Acton Bell for Anne.

“Wuthering Heights” was rushed to publication after the success of Charlotte Brontë’s “Jane Eyre,” and the first edition is notorious for its typographical errors including, Wiltshire noted, the occasional misspelling of the word “heights.”

Emerald Fennell ’s recent movie with Margot Robbie and Jacob Elordi as mismatched pair Cathy and Heathcliff is the latest work to be inspired by — and take liberties with — Brontë’s brooding, Gothic tale.

The novel shocked some critics when it was published, with one in 1848 decrying its “vulgar depravity and unnatural horrors.”

Since then, Wiltshire said, it has “moved beyond literature to become a cultural touchstone,” inspiring art, music — notably Kate Bush’s pop-operatic 1978 song — and multiple film adaptations.

“It remains a work that artists return to again and again because of its emotional force, its atmosphere, and its psychological intensity, ensuring its place not only in literary history but in wider cultural imagination,” Wiltshire said.



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Taylor Swift’s ex Joe Alwyn and ‘Love Story’ star Sarah Pidgeon kiss in NYC date photos



Taylor Swift’s ex-boyfriend Joe Alwyn and “Love Story” star Sarah Pidgeon packed on the PDA while on a date in New York City.

The English actor, 35, and the American actress, 29, were seen kissing and hugging on Saturday during an outing in Brooklyn.

The two put their arms around each other as they strolled through the city and enjoyed beverages while smiling, laughing and chatting.

TheImageDirect.com
TheImageDirect.com
TheImageDirect.com

The date lasted for at least several hours, as Page Six’s exclusive photos go from day to night.

The new couple kept things casual with Pidgeon sporting a white tank top, jeans and black ballet flats, while Alwyn went with a black T-shirt, jeans and black sneakers.

This marks the pair’s second reported outing, as they were “allegedly spotted in Fort Greene [Brooklyn] last night [Wednesday].”

Alwyn notably dated Swift, 36, from the fall of 2016 until their split in the spring of 2023.

That fall, she struck up a romance with Travis Kelce, who proposed in August 2025.

The duo is set to wed on July 3 at New York City’s Madison Square Garden.

This story is developing…



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Bonnie Tyler, 75, wakes up from coma after suffering cardiac arrest



Bonnie Tyler has awoken from a medically induced coma — though she remains “seriously ill.”

On Monday, the singer’s team announced that “although her condition is improving, the recovery process is slow.”

Tyler is in intensive care in Faro, Portugal.

Bonnie Tyler, seen here in 2017, is no longer in a coma. Getty Images
The singer, pictured here in 2020, had been in a medically induced coma. Gareth Cattermole/Getty Images

Last month, the “Total Eclipse of the Heart” crooner, 75, was placed in a medically induced coma after being rushed to the hospital.

“Bonnie has been put into an induced coma by her Doctors to aid her recovery. We know that you all wish her well and ask for privacy at this difficult time, please,” a statement from Tyler’s manager read at the time.

Days earlier, a statement was released sharing that Tyler had “been admitted to hospital in Faro, Portugal, where she has a home, for emergency intestinal surgery.

“The surgery went well, and she is now recuperating.”

According to The Sun, in April, Tyler began to experience “intense abdominal pain shortly after arriving in Portugal, where she has a second home, following inconclusive tests in London.”

Tyler is in a hospital in Faro, Portugal. AFP via Getty Images
Tyler, performing here in 2014, had been rushed to hospital due to a serious tear in her bowel. Getty Images

She was rushed to the hospital with a serious tear in her bowel and had to undergo emergency surgery.

The following month, Tyler was placed in an induced coma due to complications from the surgery.

Portuguese media claimed Tyler went into cardiac arrest when doctors first attempted to bring her out of the coma several weeks ago.

She is best known for her hit song, “Total Eclipse of the Heart.” Seen here in 1986. ITV / Shutterstock
Tyler, photographed in 1986, had other hits like “Nothing But a Heartache.” Brendan Beirne / Shutterstock

All of the performer’s planned concerts until the end of August have been canceled.

Her management released a statement thanking fans for their support.

It said, “We would like to thank everyone for the tremendous sympathy and support from around the world.”

Tyler, performing in 2020, has been forced to cancel her summer tour. Gareth Cattermole/Getty Images
Earlier this year, Tyler photographed in 2014, said she was pleased with her health. / SplashNews.com

Tyler is best known for her song “Total Eclipse of the Heart,” along with other top ten hits like “It’s a Heartache” and “Holding Out For A Hero.”

In March, Tyler said she was confident in her health in an interview with Hello! magazine.

“I’m fit enough at the moment, touch wood, and I’m really enjoying doing the shows,” Tyler told the outlet at the time.



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78 ‘sick, frightened’ cats rescued from horror Pennsylvania home



 

A pet protection centre in the US has rescued nearly 80 prized Ragdoll cats from a horror house, revealing the animals were found huddled together in “conditions too difficult to comprehend”.

The Pennsylvania Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (PSPCA) and local police raided a home in Lancaster County in Pennsylvania, reportedly after a call tipped off authorities to the nightmare inside.

At the home, animal protection officers reportedly discovered dozens of the fluffy, blue-eyed cats roaming through piles of “debris and trash stacked from floor to ceiling”, as well as reports of feces and urine.

“The air was harsh, but officers spent hours working through those physically demanding conditions to ensure every animal could be found and brought to safety,” the PSPCA wrote on social media.

Mother cat and kitten rescued from a home in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania. Pennsylvania SPCA

Rescuers battled “extreme heat and dangerously high ammonia levels” caused by the overwhelming amount of accumulated animal waste.

Exposure to such toxic conditions in enclosed spaces can cause severe irritation to the eyes, nose, and throat, alongside breathing difficulties for both humans and animals.

The charity noted the environment was among the most severe and “unimaginable” they’d ever encountered.

Hidden throughout the filth, the team uncovered 78 Ragdoll cats and kittens that were said to be incredibly “frightened and sick”.

A small, white kitten with blue eyes was found frightened and sick. Pennsylvania SPCA

Ragdolls are globally renowned for their distinct bright blue eyes, long silky coats, and docile temperaments, making them one of the most popular and expensive breeds in the world.

The cats are now in safe hands at the charity’s Philadelphia headquarters, receiving forensic examinations, emergency veterinary care, nutritious food, and clean bedding.

While the community response to the rescue has been “completely overwhelming”, the felines are not yet available for adoption.

No official charges have been announced as animal cruelty investigators continue to review the case.

Here in Australia, the animal rescue sector is currently facing its own unprecedented crisis.

The cats were found huddled together in “conditions too difficult to comprehend”. Pennsylvania SPCA

The RSPCA received nearly 80,000 animals nationally in the 2024-2025 financial year, but of those thousands entering overstretched shelters, only 26,734 were rehomed into permanent families.

Shelters nationwide are operating at or near maximum capacity as the compounding pressures of the cost-of-living and housing crises push owners to their financial limits.

Local rescue groups are desperately calling on the public for support, noting that even those who cannot commit to permanent adoption can make a big difference by becoming short-term foster carers.

Everyday Aussies can also keep vital shelters afloat by volunteering their time, donating, or simply dropping off essential supplies like clean blankets, towels, and toys.



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ABC New York anchor Bill Ritter reveals symptoms he experienced years before Alzheimer’s diagnosis


Veteran ABC New York news anchor Bill Ritter said he started “forgetting people’s names and places” two years before his heartbreaking Alzheimer’s diagnosis.

Ritter — who announced he was stepping away from the news desk last week — said his symptoms got to the point that he “didn’t know why” the symptoms were happening, even despite dropping out of anchoring the 11 p.m. newscast.


Bill Ritter on GMA.
Bill Ritter’s appearance on “Good Morning America” on Monday. ABC

Four news anchors, two men in suits and two women, seated at a desk with "EYEWITNESS NEWS" branding.
Ritter announced last week he’d be leaving the news desk in light of the diagnosis. WABC

Although Ritter was able to get “a decent night’s sleep … for the first time in 25 years” with his schedule trimmed down to the 6 p.m. broadcast, his symptoms still “weren’t getting better,” he said.

Upon making that realization, he decided to get tested for the progressive neurodegenerative brain disease.

“That really was an important thing. A lot of people say, ‘I’m fine, don’t worry about it, I’m going to be fine.’ No. You gotta go do this,” he recalled of his decision to seek medical attention.

Ritter said his “first reaction” upon being diagnosed was to think of his father, who died of Alzheimer’s in 1998.

He shared his diagnosis Friday as he announced his retirement after more than a quarter-century as a fixture of New York television news.

“Spending more time with my family has now become even more important, because my life has taken a turn,” he said in the emotional broadcast.

“The treatments I’m getting are keeping it at bay. For now. But there is no guarantee, because there’s no cure yet for Alzheimer’s. So, unless someone finds an amazing cure, and soon, tonight will be the last newscast I anchor.”



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