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AdvertisementIt tracks: The closer you live to a casino, the likelier you are to develop a gambling problem. About 1% of US adults have a severe gambling problem, according to the National Council on Problem Gambling, and 2% to 3% have a mild or moderate problem. Advertisement"By the time everyone gets all excited, we're talking about really large credit-card debt, really large debts to friends and family. A lot of online debt," said Timothy Fong, a clinical professor of psychiatry at UCLA and a codirector of its gambling-studies program. In the sports world, we've recently seen some high-profile examples of young men getting into hot water from sports betting.
Persons: that's, Brett Hollenbeck, Hollenbeck, It's, Michelle Malkin, You've, Timothy Fong, Fong, Young, we've, Shohei, Ippei Mizuhara, Jontay Porter, Malkin, doesn't, it's, Emily Stewart Organizations: University of California, University of Southern, UCLA's Anderson School of Management, National Council, East, East Carolina University's, Policy Initiative, UCLA, MLB, NBA, Sports, Business Locations: Los Angeles, University of Southern California, East Carolina, America, New Jersey
The tragedy is sadly far from unique; extreme heat is turning ordinary activities deadly. Heat is the deadliest type of extreme weather, and the human-caused climate crisis is making heat waves more severe and prolonged. What heat does to your heartVideo Ad Feedback A rise in heat and humidity pushes the heart rate up. In extreme heat, your heart must work much harder to keep your body’s internal temperature stable. Blood flow to your brain decreases in extreme heat as breathing speeds up and blood vessels constrict inside your neck and skull.
Persons: Philip Kreycik, Kreycik, Santiago Mejia, Taylor, We’ve, , Matthew Huber, Damian Bailey, Bailey, , ” Bailey, Laura Paddison, Catharina Giudice, Harvard T.H, it’s, Pope Moseley, ” Moseley, Moseley, they’ve, Giudice, Purdue University’s Huber, ” Huber, Richer, Jane Baldwin, Bharat Venkat, Venkat, Jen Christensen, Mary Gilbert, Angela Dewan, Angela Fritz , Mark Oliver, Henry Zerkis, Angelica Pursley , Yukari Schrickel, Elisa Solinas, Lou Robinson Organizations: CNN, Police, San Francisco Chronicle, Purdue University, Olympic Games, University of South, Harvard, of Public Health, Arizona State University, Purdue, University of California, World Health Organization, UCLA, Mary Gilbert Story Locations: Pleasanton, California, Mecca, Paris, University of South Wales, Chan, West Africa, South Asia, University of California Irvine
The majority of those going into debt do so by charging travel expenses on a credit card, with 20% of respondents saying they would rather skip a credit card payment and put the money toward a vacation. The mindset is “‘I can’t buy a house, I’m not sure I can afford college or grad school, so I might as well go to Spain and backpack. ”They think (credit card debt) is not as risky as it is. They don’t care so much about not getting into debt.”King adds that social media has changed the way many people think about travel. “Eventually, if I’m going to get a house, I’ll get a house.
Persons: CNN — “, , Lisa Fraser, , Elizabeth Currid, Halkett, Tim Gurner, something’s, I’m, ’ ” Alex King, they’re, Fraser, FOMO, King, It’s, I’ll Organizations: CNN, University of Southern, United Locations: Taipei, Budapest, New York, University of Southern California, Spain, Hong Kong
And in that sky, directly above this beach volleyball stadium, loomed the Eiffel Tower. Of all 32 sports being played in these Olympics, none has a location that rivals beach volleyball. Beach volleyball’s Olympic history dates back to 1996 and a simple artificial beach stadium in Clayton County Park outside Atlanta. It’s easy to feel impossibly small in the shadow of the Eiffel Tower. There are seven more sunsets over Eiffel Tower Stadium for beach volleyball.
Persons: Kelly Cheng, Sara Hughes, Hughes, Cheng, They’ve, Paris . Cheng, ” Cheng, , Cameron Spencer, de Mars, , Kristen Nuss, Nuss, Taryn Kloth’s, ” Hughes, “ I’ve, ” Kelly Cheng, Loyola Stien, Aline Chamereau, Clémence Vieira, ” Chamereau, Champ de, Manoir, Rodolfo Buhrer Organizations: FIVB, University of Southern, NCAA, Hollywood, London, Horse Guards, Canada, Games, Sunday, Eiffel, Loyola, Paralympic, Olympic Locations: University of Southern California, Paris ., Paris, Angeles, Santa Monica, Clayton County Park, Atlanta, St James’s, London, Rio, Copacabana, Tokyo, Shiokaze, American, U.S, Czech Republic, Germany, Eurasia
Moses Lin says he'll never consider going back to college, despite being one semester shy of graduating with a bachelor's degree. "I knew that if I went to college and took a traditional route, I'd be hundreds of thousands in debt," he says. Lin started a YouTube channel during college, where he posted acoustic covers of pop songs, and began teaching guitar lessons for money. Now, after years of building his own business as a traveling wedding guitarist and investing his earnings into real estate, Lin, 31, is on track to make $500,000 this year. Lin taught himself everything when it comes to building his business as a wedding guitarist.
Persons: Moses Lin, he'll, Lin, I've Organizations: U.S . Marine Corps, Vanguard University of Southern, CNBC Locations: Vanguard University of Southern California, Ireland, Singapore, Dubai, U.S
one memo from the Harris campaign read. The Harris campaign has already sent out fundraising emails with the subject line, "What happened to: 'Any time, any place?'" Campaign experts who spoke with BI said that the attacks so far appear to be working but also recognized that voters are still seeing the early formations of Harris' campaign. AdvertisementBloomberg reported that Harris' campaign has narrowed her list to three names, citing sources familiar with the matter, to Arizona Sen. Mark Kelly, Pennsylvania Gov. A Harris campaign spokesperson did not immediately return a request for comment from Business Insider.
Persons: , Joe Biden, Kamala Harris, haven't, Evan Siegfried, Harris, Biden, Seigfried, Trump, Blunt, JD Vance, Trump's, rebutting Vance, Christian Grose, Grose, Siegfried, goading Trump, Costas Panagopoulos, Panagopoulos, Tim Hogan, Arizona Sen, Mark Kelly, Josh Shapiro, Tim Walz Organizations: Service, Democratic, Biden, Business, Republican, Trump, University of Southern, GOP, Northeastern University, Politico, BI, Bloomberg, Minnesota Gov Locations: Ohio, University of Southern California, Arizona, Pennsylvania
Twenty years ago, when I was 35, I left my life in the greater Boston area to pursue a job opportunity in glamorous Milan. I was on a permesso di soggiorno (residence work permit), which allowed me one year to find another job. With a few months left on my permit, I received an offer to work for a U.S. multinational with offices in Italy. I was so glad that I hung in there and bet on myself and my life in Italy. Ultimately, I learned valuable things about my peers and the business over a relaxing meal or coffee.
Persons: I've, Leslie Strazzullo, It's, soggiorno Organizations: Duomo, Milano, University of South, Pirelli Locations: Milan, Boston, University of South Carolina, Italy, Hall, U.S
Healthcare professionals told BI that the public's more relaxed attitude toward COVID is ultimately a good thing. AdvertisementThe long COVID scareRelaxed attitudes are not necessarily a bad thing, according to doctors. On the one hand, people are generally not getting as sick as they once did when ill with COVID, medical professionals told BI. AdvertisementMedical professionals are doing their best to understand long COVID, but admit that there's still much to learn. "When I treat people with long COVID, they are always masked," Chopra said.
Persons: , Joe Biden, Anita Chopra, Eric Chow, Edward Jones, Lopez, Chow, we've, Jessica Bender, Bender, Chopra, Long, ROBYN BECK Organizations: Service, Business, University of Washington, Public Health Seattle, Yahoo, Keck Medicine, University of Southern, Centers for Disease Control, UW, Getty, National Library of Medicine Locations: King County, University of Southern California, Seattle
The covert nature of Brahe’s work was common among alchemists of the Renaissance, who kept their knowledge close to the vest. “Tungsten had not even been described at that time, so what should we infer from its presence on a shard from Tycho Brahe’s alchemy workshop?” Rasmussen said. In addition to serving as Brahe's home, Uraniborg functioned as a scientific center where students across Europe came to live and work. And Brahe himself wrote that the king was eager to support the scientist’s work in both astronomy and alchemy. Given the amount of gold found in Brahe’s remains, he may have also taken medicine containing potable, or drinkable, gold.
Persons: Tycho Brahe, Brahe, Kaare Lund Rasmussen, Poul Grinder, Hansen, Uraniborg, Lund University Gold, Rasmussen, , “ Tungsten, ” Rasmussen, Ann Ronan, Carl Wilhelm Scheele, Juan José, Fausto d’Elhuyar y de Suvisa, wolfram, Georgius Agricola, Agricola, Lawrence Principe, Drew, ” Principe, King Frederick II of Denmark, De Agostini, Paracelsus, Rudolph II, Emperor, Stjerneborg, , ” Brahe, Isaac Newton, Johns, King Frederick II’s, Christian IV, Johannes Kepler, Kepler, Newton, Galileo Galilei Organizations: CNN, University of Southern, National Museum of Denmark, Heritage, Lund University, Getty Images, Humanities, Singleton Center, Johns Hopkins University, De Agostini Editorial, Culture, Hulton, Art, Sun, Scientific Locations: Danish, Ven, Sweden, University of Southern Denmark, Copenhagen, Europe, Baltimore . Principe, Norway, Uraniborg, Brahe’s, Mercury, Principe, Johns Hopkins
Jule Hamrick spent years in physical therapy to learn how to walk again after a West Nile Virus infection. “So kind of like what you see with long Covid, we’ve seen that with West Nile as well, where you can get this ‘long West Nile’ kind of picture.”Watching West Nile patients struggle to recover from their infections made Murray wonder what would become of survivors over time. Brittany Yeager recently returned to the Girl Scout Camp in Idaho where she caught the West Nile virus. She went to two hospitals before a doctor tested her spinal fluid and discovered that she had West Nile virus. The CDC keeps maps of where West Nile cases have been detected in the United States.
Persons: Brittany Yeager, Yeager, Charlie, Streby, , , Kisstina Streby, John Brittingham, he’s, Jule Hamrick, welt, ” Yeager, Brittingham, Jule Hamrick “, Ben Beard, Emma Underwood, , Kristy Murray, Atlanta . Murray, they’ve, ” Murray, Murray, Max Vigilant, we’ve, she’s, Erin Staples, ” Staples, Staples, haven’t, “ It’s, Charlie Yeager Yeager, Heather, ” Heather, Heather Brittingham John, John, backslide, she’d, ” Jule Hamrick, Hamrick, She’s, don’t, It’s, ” Hamrick Organizations: CNN, Girl Scout, US Centers for Disease Control, Prevention’s, Vector, University of South, Emory University, Houston, Harris County Public Health, West, US Food and Drug Administration, New England, of Medicine, CDC, Vaccine, Locations: Idaho, Santa Fe , New Mexico, Roswell , Georgia, University of South Florida, Tampa, Hillsborough County , Florida, West, Atlanta ., New York City, Nile, Harris County, Tex, Texas, West Nile, Kennewick , Washington, CDC’s, United States, Santa Fe, Santa, Albuquerque, Chicago, Houston
A Thursday report from Zillow indicates that a typical starter home is now worth $1 million or more in 237 cities, up from 84 cities in 2019, underscoring America’s ongoing home affordability crisis. “We see the largest number of million-dollar starter homes in expensive coastal markets. To further complicate things for first-time buyers, the value of starter homes has grown at a faster pace than the average home. According to Zillow, starter home values have grown 54.1% over the past five years, while the average US home has increased by 49.1%. The nationwide average price tag for a starter home is $196,611, according to Zillow.
Persons: underscoring, ” Orphe, , It’s, homebuyer, Zillow, Jeffrey Jenkins, Divounguy, “ That’s, , Lawrence Yun Organizations: CNN, Gallup, National Association of Realtors, University of Southern Locations: Zillow, California , New York, New Jersey, University of Southern California, United States
It was one line from an itinerary of an upcoming field trip to Columbia, the capital of South Carolina. And no place proved more prescient than those Capitol steps. Deep in my heart, I was certain that one day I’d be living in Columbia as a college student. Illustration Ian Berry/CNNThe cosmos and crimeThe afternoon stops solidified the revelation I felt on the State House steps. For me, it was a mere 60-mile, in-state field trip – culminating with a Boxed Lunch on the Capitol Steps – that proved to be my date with destiny.
Persons: I’d, Columbia –, That’s, Robert Mills, Ian Berry, Mills, disharmony, Gibbes, Alex Murdaugh, , Douglas, Forrest Brown Organizations: CNN, Columbia, University of South Carolina, Belk, Kmart, CNN Travel, Capitol, State House, State, USC, Mills, South, South Carolina Law, Division, University of South, Presbyterian Student Center, CNN Digital Locations: Columbia, South Carolina, New York City, London, Western, University of South Carolina
It was the top box office film of the year, earning $1.4 billion worldwide, and it became Warner Bros.’s highest-grossing film ever, outpacing both “Dark Knight” movies, “Wonder Woman” and every chapter in the “Harry Potter” franchise. It was a DayGlo-pink rebuttal to decades of conventional Hollywood thinking, and its success seemed to herald a new paradigm for the film industry. Movies written and directed by women and focused on female protagonists could attract enormous audiences to multiplexes around the world. Yet in the 12 months since the movie’s release, little has changed in Hollywood. The box office is down 17 percent from last year at this time, and studios spooked by a fickle audience (yes to “Twisters,” no to “Fall Guy”) are again questioning the reliability of the theatrical marketplace.
Persons: “ Barbie ”, Harry Potter ”, Guy ”, Barbie ”, Greta Gerwig, Margot Robbie Organizations: Warner Bros, Films, University of Southern California’s, Hollywood Locations: Hollywood
A daily dose of a widely used antibiotic can prevent some infections with syphilis, gonorrhea and chlamydia, potentially a new solution to the escalating crisis of sexually transmitted infections, scientists reported on Thursday. Scientists still have to resolve significant questions, including whether S.T.I.s might become resistant to the antibiotic and what effect it could have on healthy gut bacteria in people taking it every day. The approach would be recommended primarily to people at elevated risk of sexually transmitted infections during certain periods, said Dr. Jeffrey Klausner, an infectious diseases physician at the University of Southern California who was not involved in the new work. “The number of people who are really going to be offered this and take this is still very small,” he said. “In general, the more choices we have for people, the more prevention options we have, the better.”
Persons: Jeffrey Klausner, , Organizations: University of Southern Locations: University of Southern California
A full public assessment of Trump’s injuries is necessary, for both the former president’s own health and the clarity it can provide for voters about the recovery of the man who could become president of the United States once again. US Rep. Ronny Jackson, Trump’s former White House physician, said during an interview Monday on “The Benny Show” podcast, that he “checked out” the wound to Trump’s ear and bandaged it himself. We have worked with the Secret Service in the past and local and federal law enforcement to come up with plans about if an incident like this happened,” Rottinghaus told CNN. In the Monday interview, Jackson said Trump’s injury was “dressed up. Rottinghaus, the Butler Memorial physician, told CNN that after all the preparation for the unthinkable, “the unexpected happened” on Saturday.
Persons: CNN — It’s, Donald Trump’s, Corey Comperatore, Trump, we’ve, aren’t, , wasn’t, Ronny Jackson, Trump’s, ” Jackson, ” Trump, David Rottinghaus, ” Rottinghaus, Rottinghaus, Butler, Jackson, It’s, he’s, Eric Trump, I’ve, , Kenji Inaba, Dr, Sanjay Gupta, Nadia Kounang, Deidre McPhillips, Maya Davis, Jamie Gumbrecht Organizations: CNN, Republican, Truth, Sunday, Butler Memorial Hospital, Service, US, White House, Hospital, CBS News, Republican National Convention, Keck School of Medicine, University of Southern, Trump, CNN Health, Staff Locations: Butler , Pennsylvania, United States, Butler, Milwaukee, University of Southern California
download the appSign up to get the inside scoop on today’s biggest stories in markets, tech, and business — delivered daily. Read previewAn expert in healthy aging who claims to have reversed his biological age by 20 years shared his diet principles with Business Insider. Dr. Michael Roizen, an anesthesiologist and the chief wellness officer at Cleveland Clinic, is 78 years old. (It's important to note there is no consensus on the definition of biological age or how to measure it.) Here are the diet principles Roizen follows.
Persons: , Michael Roizen, Roizen, Valter Longo, He's, David Clancy, wasn't Organizations: Service, Business, Cleveland Clinic, US News, University of Alagoas, Longevity, gerontology, University of Southern California Longevity Institute, USC, Lancaster University, UK, BMI, BI Locations: Brazil
Monte Kiffin: Longtime NFL and college coach dies at 84
  + stars: | 2024-07-12 | by ( Jacob Lev | ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: +2 min
CNN —Longtime NFL and college coach Monte Kiffin has died at the age of 84, the University of Mississippi announced on Thursday. Kiffin passed away peacefully in Oxford, Mississippi, surrounded by friends and family, the school said. The Buccaneers-owning Glazer family said Monte was a “beloved and iconic member” of the organization. “As a coach, Monte was a true innovator who got the best out of his players and helped create one of the signature defenses of the early 2000s,” the Glazer family said in a statement. Lane has been the head coach of Ole Miss since 2020 where Monte has been an analyst on the staff.
Persons: CNN —, Monte Kiffin, Kiffin, , Knox, ” Kiffin, Glazer, Monte, Hall, Warren Sapp, Derrick Brooks, John Lynch, Ronde Barber, Robin, Lane, Chris, Heidi, Lane’s, Ole Miss, Organizations: CNN, CNN — Longtime NFL, University of Mississippi, NFL, Tampa Bay Buccaneers, Minnesota Vikings, New, New Orleans Saints, Dallas Cowboys, Tampa, Buccaneers, Oakland Raiders, Super Bowl, Hall of Famers, University of Tennessee, University of Southern, Florida Atlantic University Locations: Oxford , Mississippi, New Orleans, University of Southern California
CNN —Depending on your age, the name Stan Smith probably means one of two things. Even Jordan doesn’t have his face on a sneaker.”Stan Smith during his victorious 1972 Wimbledon run. The rise in popularity of the Stan Smith sneaker coincided with a slump towards the end of his tennis career and it began permeating a wide array of cultures in the UK and US. “It was one of my goals to win that tournament,” Smith says. Stan Smith, Ilie Năstase and Tom Okker at a meeting of the Association of Tennis Professionals (ATP) in London, 20th June 1973.
Persons: Stan Smith, ” Smith, , it’s, , Cari, Jordan doesn’t, ” Stan Smith, Danny Lee, Smith, that’s, Stan Smith sneaker, David Bowie, , Pharrell Williams, Robert Haillet sneaker, Nicolas Armer, Horst Dassler, Donald Dell, Adidas Robert Haillet, Gary Aspden, ” Arthur Ashe, Arthur Ashe, Henry Burroughs, Ashe, ” Dell, Lyndon Johnson, Ashe couldn’t, Bob Lutz, LeBron James ’, Dell, Martin Luther King Jr, Tony Duffy, Allsport, Ashe’s, Arthur, ” Lee, Smith’s, Mark Mathabane, Marjory, Mathabane, Roger Jackson, wasn’t, Niki Pilić, Pilić, Smith –, Ilie Năstase, Tom Okker, Michael Webb, Stan Organizations: CNN, Adidas, Wimbledon, Hulton, Beastie Boys, Davis, Pasadena Tennis, US Davis, USA, Los Angeles Tennis Club, Americas, Civil, wouldn’t, Star ”, South, University of South, Central Press, International Tennis Federation, , Yugoslav Tennis Association, Tennis, Association of Tennis Professionals, Keystone Locations: Young, Paris, USA, French, Wimbledon, Pasadena , California, Pasadena, American, Mexico, America, Vietnam, Houston , Texas, United States, South Africa, Beverly Hills, Soweto, Alexandria, South African, Johannesburg, University of South Carolina, , London,
Comparing the timing of seismic signals as they touched the core revealed changes in core rotation over time, confirming the 70-year rotation cycle. But the depth and inaccessibility of the inner core mean that uncertainties remain, she added. The mysterious region where the liquid outer core envelops the solid inner core is especially interesting, Vidale added. “We might have volcanoes on the inner core boundary, for example, where solid and fluid are meeting and moving,” he said. Because the spinning of the inner core affects movement in the outer core, inner core rotation is thought to help power Earth’s magnetic field, though more research is required to unravel its precise role.
Persons: seismologist Inge Lehmann, , , Lauren Waszek, , ” Waszek, John Vidale, “ We’ve, ” Vidale, we’ve, what’s, Vidale, Seismologists, Lehmann, Waszek, ” Mindy Weisberger Organizations: CNN, James Cook University, Earth Sciences, University of Southern California’s Dornsife, of Letters, Arts and Sciences, Geological Survey, Scientific Locations: Australia, New Zealand, South Sandwich, South
Below your feet, about 3,400 miles down, is Earth's inner core. The data implies that in 2010, the inner core reversed its rotational direction compared to the Earth's surface — a phenomenon called backtracking. Now, the inner core is rotating more slowly than before the shift. Related storiesBut a recent study offers a new way of looking at the data that could help settle the debate. Proving the inner core is backtrackingJohn Vidale is part of the new research that offers more evidence to the notion that the inner core is backtracking.
Persons: aren't, It's, John Vidale, Stephen Gee, Vidale Organizations: Service, Business, University of Southern, USC Locations: University of Southern California, South Sandwich Islands
ARFID: the eating disorder you haven’t heard of
  + stars: | 2024-07-02 | by ( Madeline Holcombe | ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: +8 min
Now 8 years old, Hannah is being treated for Avoidant/Restrictive Food Intake Disorder, or ARFID. Unlike eating disorders like anorexia or bulimia nervosa, this diagnosis isn’t concerned with body shape or size, said Kate Dansie, clinical director of the Eating Disorder Center in Rockville, Maryland. Instead, people with ARFID are very limited in the foods they feel safe and comfortable eating, Dansie said. While an estimated 9% of the US population will have an eating disorder at some point, studies suggest that somewhere between 0.5% and 5% of the population has ARFID, according to the National Eating Disorders Association. One way to spot the difference is the level of impairment and anxiety that comes with facing a new food, Murray said.
Persons: Hannah, didn’t, Michelle, Kate Dansie, Dansie, , , Stuart Murray, Murray, ARFID, nutritively, ” Hannah, ” Dansie, ” Murray, , Nicole Stettler, “ It’s, ” Michelle Organizations: CNN, Girl Scouts, Disorders, Eating Disorders, University of Southern, , Rogers Behavioral Health Locations: Rockville , Maryland, University of Southern California
New York CNN —Trying to get a table at a buzzy new restaurant in New York or Los Angeles? American Express already owns Resy, a rival restaurant booking app, and gives special table access to Amex customers that are not available to other customers. But experts say that Amex’s acquisition gives the credit card company more control over velvet rope access to dinner — and who is shut out. It may help restaurants attract Amex customers with deeper wallets, said Alex Susskind, a professor of food and beverage management at Cornell University. Restaurant owners and merchants have also complained about the fees credit card companies charge businesses, and it could open a new door for fees.
Persons: you’re, Rajesh Bhardwaj, Amex, , ’ “, ” Joseph Nunes, Alex Susskind, Organizations: New, New York CNN, American Express, American, Delta SkyMiles Reserve, University of Southern, Cornell University Locations: New York, Los Angeles, New York City, United States, Resy, University of Southern California
Tractor Supply Co. backtracks on DEI roles and goals
  + stars: | 2024-06-29 | by ( Eva Rothenberg | ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: +6 min
New York CNN —Tractor Supply Company has eliminated its diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives as part of what the retail chain says is a push to distance itself from “nonbusiness activities” after conservative backlash from some of its customer base. “You can’t say you’re going to try to do at Tractor Supply what they do at the Apple headquarters in Cupertino, California — that’s definitely not going to work,” he said. “Tractor Supply Co is turning its back on their own neighbors with this shortsighted decision,” Eric Bloem, vice president of Programs and Corporate Advocacy at the Human Rights Campaign, told CNN in a statement Saturday. This is why the Tractor Supply — and most of the country’s biggest employers — have worked with us for years to create inclusive policies and practices. Those are the parts that business leaders aren’t thinking about as they are folding on DEI.”
Persons: , , Robby Starbuck, Starbuck, X, ” Shaun Harper, Harper, that’s, ” Eric Bloem, , Bud Light’s, influencer Dylan Mulvaney Organizations: New, New York CNN — Tractor Supply Company, Supply, Tennessee’s, Congressional, Tractor Supply, University of Southern, CNN, Tractor, National FFA Organization, Apple, , Human Rights, , Companies, Anheuser, Busch InBev, Target Locations: New York, University of Southern California, Brentwood , Tennessee, Cupertino , California, United States
Kristin Lunz Trujillo grew up proud of her family’s way of life. Despite being physically close to home, Ms. Lunz Trujillo was surprised by how foreign her upbringing seemed at the college. When an art history teacher asked students which famous paintings they’d seen in person, Ms. Lunz Trujillo stayed quiet, because she had never been to an art museum. This sense of cultural alienation molded her research when she became a political scientist: What is rural identity? This year, Ms. Lunz Trujillo, now an assistant professor at the University of South Carolina, was reading a new, best-selling book that cited her research to explore those same questions.
Persons: Kristin Lunz Trujillo, Lunz Trujillo Organizations: University of South Locations: Carleton, Minnesota, University of South Carolina
Related stories"Something terrible happens to one of these candidates once every two weeks — usually Trump," Grose said. Justin Sullivan/Getty ImagesSCOTUS surprisesLess than 24 hours after the debate, the Supreme Court handed down two major decisions, which, at first glance, appeared to be more good news for Trump. On Friday, legal experts told Business Insider that the decision was good news for Trump's legal prospects. It could remind voters unhappy with the Supreme Court's conservative drift that another Trump term could mean more Trump SCOTUS appointees. Undecided voters with strong opinions on abortion and January 6 could be turned off by Trump's Supreme Court appointees and their increasingly conservative rulings, he suggested.
Persons: , Donald Trump, Joe Biden, Trump, Biden, Christian Grose, Grose, it's, David Triana, Justin Sullivan, SCOTUS, Jack Smith's, Triana Organizations: Service, Republican, Supreme Court, Trump, Business, Biden, University of Southern, Conservatives, Department of Justice, Trump's, Court Locations: University of Southern California, Trump
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