New Photo - Summer McIntosh wins fourth gold of the World Aquatics Championships

Summer McIntosh wins fourth gold of the World Aquatics Championships George Ramsay, CNNAugust 4, 2025 at 5:37 PM McIntosh won her fourth gold medal at the World Championships in the 400m medley.

- - Summer McIntosh wins fourth gold of the World Aquatics Championships

George Ramsay, CNNAugust 4, 2025 at 5:37 PM

McIntosh won her fourth gold medal at the World Championships in the 400m medley. - Tingshu Wang/Reuters

Summer McIntosh won her fourth gold medal of the World Aquatics Championships in Singapore with a dominant performance in the 400-meter individual medley.

The Canadian teenager finished in 4:25.78 to set a new championship record and cap off a near-perfect meet with five medals across her events.

American superstar Katie Ledecky is the only other woman to win as many golds at a single World Championships, while only Sweden's Sarah Sjöström has matched McIntosh's tally of five medals.

With her bronze medal in the 800-meter freestyle on Saturday, McIntosh fell just short of matching Michael Phelps' record of five gold medals at a single World Championships.

"Overall, I'm happy with this World Championships," McIntosh told CBC News. "I have to be, four golds is something that I've never achieved at the world stage before.

"I broke my kind of curse of three – everything comes in threes but now everything comes in fours, and hopefully, I can push for everything to come in fives."

In Sunday's 400-meter individual medley, the 18-year-old finished more than seven seconds clear of Australia's Jenna Forrester and Japan's Mio Narita, who tied for silver with a time of 4:33.26.

China's 12-year-old Yu Zidi, who previously became the youngest medalist at the World Championships, was half a second outside the medals in fourth.

McIntosh now has 13 medals from the World Championships, including eight golds. In Singapore, she also took victories in the 400m freestyle, the 200m butterfly, and the 200m medley.

In the men's 400m medley, France's Léon Marchand won his second gold medal of the championships by completing a medley double.

His winning time of 4:04.73 saw him finish ahead of Japan's Tomoyuki Matsushita and Russian Ilia Borodin in second and third respectively, claiming his seventh career gold at the World Championships.

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Summer McIntosh wins fourth gold of the World Aquatics Championships

Summer McIntosh wins fourth gold of the World Aquatics Championships George Ramsay, CNNAugust 4, 2025 at 5:37 PM M...
New Photo - Phenom Jacob Misiorowski injury is speed bump, but Brewers may make it a boon

Phenom Jacob Misiorowski injury is speed bump, but Brewers may make it a boon Gabe Lacques, USA TODAYAugust 4, 2025 at 7:04 PM WASHINGTON – There's very little, it seems, that can harsh the Milwaukee Brewers' vibe these days.

- - Phenom Jacob Misiorowski injury is speed bump, but Brewers may make it a boon

Gabe Lacques, USA TODAYAugust 4, 2025 at 7:04 PM

WASHINGTON – There's very little, it seems, that can harsh the Milwaukee Brewers' vibe these days.

From offseason talent-shedding to an in-season cycle of constant roster churn to robust competition in the National League, it's almost impossible to puncture both the power of friendship and the league-leading prosperity the Brew Crew enjoys.

Heck, at this point, even an injury to a prized young pitcher that would otherwise portend storm clouds can be viewed positively.

Oh, we won't know for sure until Aug. 15, when Jacob Misiorowski, the right-handed comet best known for earning an All-Star Game nod just five games into his career, is scheduled to come off the injured list.

The Miz, as he's known from Menomonie to Muskego and points beyond, has a tibia contusion on his left shin, the result of a very real line drive that came off the bat of the Chicago Cubs' Seiya Suzuki at 102.9 mph, coincidentally about as hard as Misiorowski's nastiest fastball comes out of his hand.

Misiorowski received X-rays after that and additional imaging this weekend at Nationals Park before the Brewers scratched him roughly three hours before his Sunday, Aug. 3 scheduled start.

The Miz is fully ambulatory, has been throwing and will continue to throw, probably could've one hundred or so times Sunday but instead, gave way to rookie Logan Henderson against the Washington Nationals.

"They had an idea for me," Misiorowski said Sunday morning, "and it's basically, this is what it's going to be. Obviously, I tried to fight it a little bit, trying to throw, but I understand and they're looking out for me."

It sounded like a rather tepid "fight," and it also sounds like a very good "idea."

Jacob Misiorowski was named an MLB All-Star after just five starts.

See, Henderson had few problems suppressing the moribund Nationals, pitching into the fifth inning in a 14-3 victory that capped a three-game sweep. Aggregate score: 38-14. While The Miz is hardly a luxury item, if you can avoid bringing Gucci luggage on a camping trip, why not?

After all, when the Brewers placed Misiorowski on the IL, seven of their next 10 games would come against the last-place Nationals, the 46-63 Atlanta Braves and the last-place Pittsburgh Pirates.

When he returns, Misiorowski's first two starts would be against the wild-card contender Cincinnati Reds and those second-place, 64-46 Cubs, part of a five-game series at Wrigley Field that marks the last meeting between the teams this season.

And Misiorowski's 96 ⅔ innings pitched this season almost exactly matches his professional high of 97 ⅓ innings, reached last year.

Sounds like a perfect time to pump the brakes on the kid a little bit. For competitive and, you know, other reasons.

"He's had a lot coming at him," says Brewers manager Pat Murphy. "He came to the big leagues, the great start, the All-Star Game, line drive off the leg, hyperextended knee.

"That's all part of your first five, six games."

Now the 23-year-old has seven whole big league starts under his belt, during which he's struck out 47 batters in 33 ⅓ innings, riding a fastball whose 99.3 mph velocity is tied for eighth in the majors – including relievers.

While Misiorowski insists there is no hard ceiling on his innings count, there is a concept of how many bullets – especially of the 100-mph variety – a guy has in a season. The Brewers, now 67-44, are in an absolute dogfight in the Central and, more broadly, in an NL with a half-dozen teams playing at least .550 ball.

Much bigger fights almost certainly remain for a club with a 97.3% chance of making the playoffs, per FanGraphs.

"The kid is special," Brewers veteran right-hander Brandon Woodruff tells USA TODAY Sports. "We've kind of seen here early on what he can do. He's just scratching the surface for what he can become.

"Take care of this, have him fully ready to go for the stretch and the end of the year – probably be a good thing."

Especially when there's plenty of infrastructure to support it.

Got to get over the hump

Murphy is well-versed at roster juggling – the Brewers used 36 pitchers last season and have already called upon 28 this season. Henderson has shown well in his five starts – he now has a 1.78 ERA and 0.99 WHIP after getting into the fifth Sunday – yet is simply another next-man-up in the Brewers' world.

It's all by design, the pieces well-prepared.

"Everyone in our (spring training) room last year pitched for us," says Murphy. "I let them know, if you have options, you're going to be up and down. Because we need that flexibility. Anybody with options, you might be optioned.

"And probably will be."

Saturday night, Henderson heard his name called in this version of Brewers bingo, scratched from his start with Class AAA Nashville at Scranton-Wilkes Barre, told to scramble to Washington to fill in for Misiorowski.

After an evening drive south with his family at the wheel, he shut down the Nationals and now, the Brewers are 5-0 in his starts.

A lot of Logan Hendersons add up to 67-44.

"I did not expect it," says Henderson of his emergency assignment, "but I was ready for it. We're all in Nashville watching the boys win up here and it's been really fun and we all want to contribute.

"I think that's the toughest battle, to be quite honest, trying to feel a part of the team up here when you're down there. It fuels you more. It makes you want to get back up here and be ready for any opportunity."

It's all part of the Brewers' grand maneuvering, a place where a given winter might see them shed an All-Star piece like closer Devin Williams, or where the biggest trade deadline addition (upright division) might be reserve catcher Danny Jansen.

The deadline is past them and the maneuvering can begin, but Murphy realizes the Milwaukee mojo is a delicate brew.

"It works both ways. You get so myopic about all that and forget that these are still people," says Murphy. "It's got to be fun. If all of a sudden, these guys start taking on expectations that are different from the normal expectations of playing in the big leagues and playing as a team, if they start letting their energy and focus go toward something different, then it can screw everything up.

"You've got to keep their focus and their energies just on how we do it. And let it all play out."

Since 2018, that more likely means a taste of the postseason but not much more. The Brewers lost Game 7 of the 2018 NLCS to the Dodgers, then bowed out as a wild card the next two seasons. They won the Central in 2021, '23 and '24 but lost in the first round each time, the past two seasons in the wild card round as they failed to secure a first-round bye.

If nothing else, they're a worthy steppingstone. The Brewers lost to the eventual World Series champion in 2019, 2020 and '21, while Arizona won the NL pennant after dispatching them in '23 and the New York Mets made a startling NLCS run last season.

Not that there's any satisfaction in that.

"We've had a good run here the last eight years. In '18, one game away from getting to the World Series," mused Woodruff, who has pitched excellently – a 2.01 ERA in four starts – in his return from shoulder surgery that cost him all of 2024. "Ever since then, it's been a battle. We've made the playoffs, but it's like we can't get over that hump.

"You keep knocking on the door, knocking on the door and hopefully one of these years, you get over the hump. Hopefully this year is the year."

That's a question the next three months will answer. They'll bid the Cubs farewell in three weeks, left to battle apart the remainder of the year.

Beyond that, many of the Brewers' old tormentors will lurk in the postseason bracket. Carrying a bye beyond the wild card round would give Milwaukee an advantage it's never enjoyed.

"There's some really good teams out there, with a lot more experience. Teams with a lot more physical talent," says Murphy. "But we're pretty good as a team.

"We have to stick with that, and really understand that. If we think we're not going to go through bumps, we're crazy. There's going to be bumps."

Yet in the case of Misiorowski, the Brewers hope to turn a bump into a boon.

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This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Jacob Misiorowski injury is bump for Brewers in NL Central standings

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Phenom Jacob Misiorowski injury is speed bump, but Brewers may make it a boon

Phenom Jacob Misiorowski injury is speed bump, but Brewers may make it a boon Gabe Lacques, USA TODAYAugust 4, 202...
New Photo - Job market concerns take center stage as earnings season rolls on: What to watch this week

Job market concerns take center stage as earnings season rolls on: What to watch this week Josh SchaferAugust 4, 2025 at 4:49 PM Stocks tumbled from record highs on Friday as data revealed the US labor market is not on as solid footing as previously thought.

- - Job market concerns take center stage as earnings season rolls on: What to watch this week

Josh SchaferAugust 4, 2025 at 4:49 PM

Stocks tumbled from record highs on Friday as data revealed the US labor market is not on as solid footing as previously thought.

On the week, the S&P 500 (^GSPC) fell nearly 2.4%, while the Nasdaq Composite (^IXIC) slid 2.2% and the Dow Jones Industrial Average (^DJI) shed 1.2%.

Markets will be greeted with a quieter week of economic news with no major releases anticipated.

Meanwhile, another busy week of corporate releases is set to greet investors with 122 S&P 500 companies set to report, led by Palantir (PLTR), Eli Lilly (LLY), and Disney (DIS).

A September shift

Markets exited Wednesday's Federal Reserve press conference leaning toward no interest rate cuts in the near future. That narrative flipped on its head on Friday morning.

The latest monthly jobs report showed the US labor market added fewer jobs than expected in July while the unemployment rate moved higher, and revisions to prior months' numbers revealed significantly fewer jobs had been added than initially thought.

In its release, the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) said downward revisions to the May and June jobs reports "were larger than normal," with those changes showing more than a quarter million fewer jobs were added to the economy over those months. May's job gains were revised down to 19,000 from 144,000, while June's additions were cut to just 14,000 from the 147,000 initially reported.

Read more: How jobs, inflation, and the Fed are all related

The White House economic advisers on Sunday defended President Trump's decision to fire the BLS chief, rejecting concerns that the move could erode trust in official US economic figures.

Market pricing and economists argue Friday's report was likely a game changer for the overall economic narrative and how the Fed will move forward. Following Friday's jobs report, the probability of a September interest rate cut from the Fed surged to 83%, up from just 38% the day prior, per the CME FedWatch Tool.

"Our base case since January has been that the Fed won't cut rates this year," Bank of America Securities US economist Shruti Mishra wrote in a note to clients. "However, we have been arguing that the most likely alternate scenario is that labor market deterioration will force the Fed into 'bad cuts', which could play out at a pace of at least 25bp per meeting. The massive downward revision to payrolls in the July jobs report increases the probability of this scenario."

Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell talks to reporters following the regular Federal Open Market Committee meetings at the Fed on July 30, 2025, in Washington, D.C. (Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images) (Chip Somodevilla via Getty Images)AI leadership

The July jobs report showed the US economy may be slowing more than initially thought, sparking a Friday market sell-off.

"Ultimately, stocks do better in a stronger economy than one that requires the intervention from the Fed," Interactive Brokers chief strategist Steve Sosnick told Yahoo Finance.

The economic growth concerns clouded what had been a positive week for the market, as Big Tech earnings revealed AI investment is not stopping anytime soon. In a note to clients on Friday, Capital Economics senior market economist James Reilly wrote that Friday's market sell-off is likely "overdone," as AI will remain the "key driver" of global equities.

"These major US 'hyperscalers' are collectively continuing to invest heavily," Reilly wrote while pointing out Big Tech has recently outperformed the broader market following earnings reports. "That's one reason why we are positive on the outlook for the tech-heavy segments of the stock market, and on the outlook for US stocks as a whole."

Read more: Live coverage of corporate earnings

Earnings volatility

After about two-thirds of the S&P 500 have reported earnings, the index is pacing for earnings growth of 10.3%, up from the 5% expected on June 27, per FactSet data.

Largely, the market has floated higher amid the slew of earnings releases. But under the surface, there have been significant stock moves off individual reports. In just the past week, Meta (META) stock rose more than 12% after topping estimates for both revenue and earnings per share. Meanwhile, Novo Nordisk (NVO) stock tanked 20% after cutting its full-year sales outlook. Julian Emanuel, who leads the equity, derivatives, and quantitative strategy team at Evercore ISI, noted that stocks are moving more than average in the day following releases, regardless of whether or not they beat or miss Wall Street's expectations.

For example, the average S&P 500 stock that misses estimates for both sales and earnings per share is seeing a 4.9% decline on the next trading day, a steeper decline than the average of 3.2% seen over the past five years.

With the market trading near record highs, Emanuel noted investors are "agitated by anything short of perfect" this corporate earnings season.

Weekly CalendarMonday

Economic data: Factory orders, June (-5% expected, +8.2% prior); Durable goods orders, June final (-9.3% expected, -9.3% prior)

Earnings: Hims & Hers (HIMS), Palantir (PLTR), Tyson (TSN), Wayfair (W)

Tuesday

Economic data: S&P Global US Services PMI, July final (55.2 prior), S&P Global US Composite, July final (54.6 prior); ISM services index, July (51.5 expected, 50.8 prior)

Earnings: AMD (AMD), BP (BP), Caterpillar (CAT), Duke Energy (DUK), Lucid Group (LCID), Opendoor (OPEN), Pfizer (PFE), Rivian (RIVN), Super Micro Computer (SMCI), Snap (SNAP), Upstart (UPST)

Wednesday

Economic data: MBA mortgage applications, week ending Aug. 1 (-3.8% prior)

Earnings: AppLovin (APP), e.l.f. Beauty (ELF), Disney (DIS), DraftKings (DKNG), McDonald's (MCD), Novo Nordisk (NVO), Shopify (SHOP), Six Flags (FUN), Uber (UBER)

Thursday

Economic data: Initial jobless claims, week ending Aug. 2 (218,000 prior); Nonfarm productivity, second quarter preliminary (+2.5% expected, -1.5% prior); Unit labor costs, second quarter preliminary (+1.3% expected, +6.6% prior)

Earnings: Block (XYZ), Celsius (CELH), ConocoPhillips (COP), Eli Lilly (LLY), Sony (SONY), SoundHound (SOUN), Pinterest (PINS), Take-Two Interactive (TTWO), Twilio (TWLO), The Trade Desk (TTD), Vistra Energy (VST)

Friday

Economic calendar:No notable releases.

Earnings: Canopy Growth (CGC), fuboTV (FUBO), Wendy's (WEN)

Josh Schafer is a reporter for Yahoo Finance. Follow him on X @_joshschafer.

Click here for the latest economic news and indicators to help inform your investing decisions

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Job market concerns take center stage as earnings season rolls on: What to watch this week

Job market concerns take center stage as earnings season rolls on: What to watch this week Josh SchaferAugust 4, 2...
New Photo - Whale dies, passenger goes overboard after boat collision off Jersey Shore

Whale dies, passenger goes overboard after boat collision off Jersey Shore Joe Strupp, Asbury Park PressAugust 4, 2025 at 5:58 AM LONG BEACH ISLAND, N.J. – A 20foot minke whale died Saturday, Aug.

- - Whale dies, passenger goes overboard after boat collision off Jersey Shore

Joe Strupp, Asbury Park PressAugust 4, 2025 at 5:58 AM

LONG BEACH ISLAND, N.J. – A 20-foot minke whale died Saturday, Aug. 2, in Barnegat Bay after being struck by a boat, which nearly capsized and forced a passenger overboard, according to officials.

The whale was first spotted at the bay inlet at 2:45 p.m., according to the Marine Mammal Stranding Center (MMSC), which received a call from New Jersey State Police.

Rescue crews responded with the U.S. Coast Guard seeking a way to guide the whale out of the bay, MMSC reported on social media.

But before they could, the whale was struck by a vessel at 3:40 p.m. and was reported dead by officials hours later.

Video captured by a witness shows the whale swimming under a motorboat; the vessel tips to the side and a person can be seen falling into the water. Another person yells, "Cut the motor off!"

MMSC staff arrived on a NJ Fish and Wildlife Conservation Officers boat to "assess the whale, which was now resting on a sandbar in very shallow water outside of the channel," officials said on Facebook.

"They were able to approach within 30 yards of the whale, but due to the tidal conditions they could not safely access the sandbar for further direct examination."

The whale will be towed to a nearby state park for a necropsy on Monday, when appropriate equipment is available, officials said. Additionally, officials said, the tide cycle has to be proper for easier movement.

"The necropsy will follow, and will likely take several hours to complete," the MMSC statement added.

No information has been released on the identity of the boaters or further investigation.

This article originally appeared on Asbury Park Press: Whale killed in collision with New Jersey boaters: Video

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Whale dies, passenger goes overboard after boat collision off Jersey Shore

Whale dies, passenger goes overboard after boat collision off Jersey Shore Joe Strupp, Asbury Park PressAugust 4, ...
New Photo - Netanyahu asks Red Cross to help hostages in Gaza, as families warn against an 'expanding war'

Netanyahu asks Red Cross to help hostages in Gaza, as families warn against an 'expanding war' Dana Karni, Mohammed Tawfeeq, Kara Fox, and Mitchell McCluskeyAugust 4, 2025 at 6:06 PM On January 16, people in Jerusalem walk past posters of hostages kidnapped during the deadly October 7, 2023 attack b...

- - Netanyahu asks Red Cross to help hostages in Gaza, as families warn against an 'expanding war'

Dana Karni, Mohammed Tawfeeq, Kara Fox, and Mitchell McCluskeyAugust 4, 2025 at 6:06 PM

On January 16, people in Jerusalem walk past posters of hostages kidnapped during the deadly October 7, 2023 attack by Hamas. - Ammar Awad/Reuters

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has accused Hamas of not wanting a ceasefire deal and requested that the International Red Cross bring food and medical care to hostages held in Gaza, after public fury ignited over propaganda videos showing two emaciated Israeli captives.

Tens of thousands of protestors joined a rally in Tel Aviv on Saturday evening – some holding placards reading "Stop the war" and "Leave no one behind" – as they called for Netanyahu to strike a deal that would free the Israeli hostages still held in Gaza.

Videos released by the militant groups Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad last week showed hostages Evyatar David and Rom Braslavski in a visibly fragile state – images that galvanized a forceful reaction both at home and abroad.

On Sunday, the International Red Cross (ICRC) in Israel and the Occupied Territories said that it was "appalled" by the videos and urged that the "dire situation must come to an end."

Several world leaders also condemned the videos of the Israel hostages, with French President Emmanuel Macron describing them as "unbearable" and German Chancellor Friedrich Merz saying the images "show that Hamas should have no role in Gaza's future."

Netanyahu's office said on Sunday that the prime minister spoke with Julien Lerisson, the head of the Red Cross delegation in the region, to request "his involvement in the immediate provision of food and medical care for the hostages."

The office also repeated Netanyahu's denial that starvation was rife in the enclave, despite a UN-backed food security agency's warning this week that "the worst-case scenario of famine" is unfolding in Gaza.

Hamas has said it is prepared to "deal positively" with any Red Cross request to deliver food and medicine to hostages, but only on the condition that humanitarian corridors are opened up in Gaza.

The militant group claims that the hostages' emaciated state is a reflection of worsening conditions in the strip. However, other hostages who have been freed in the past have similarly appeared gaunt and frail at the time of their release and described malnourishment while in captivity.

Abu Obeida, a spokesman for Hamas' military wing, al-Qassam Brigades, said this weekend that the group does not intentionally starve the hostages, and that they eat the same food that Hamas fighters and the general Gaza population eat. "They will not receive any special privileges amid the crime of starvation and siege," he added.

A member of Hamas' political bureau, Izzat Al-Rashiq, described the images as "the definitive response to all who deny the existence of famine in Gaza."

A still from a propaganda video released by Palestinian Islamic Jihad on Thursday, July 31, shows Israeli hostage Rom Braslavski. - Palestinian Islamic Jihad

Malnutrition-related deaths in Gaza spiked in July, the latest sign of a worsening hunger crisis, the World Health Organization warned last week. The agency said the enclave's malnutrition rates reached "alarming levels," with over 5,000 children under five admitted for outpatient treatment of malnutrition in just the first two weeks of July.

Gazans also face lethal danger when attempting to collect aid from distribution sites, where violent clashes can erupt. On Sunday, a shooting incident near an aid site in northern Gaza killed at least 13 people and left dozens wounded, according to the Emergency and Medical Services in Gaza.

Allowing Red Cross access would be a shift for Hamas, which has previously opposed any access to the hostages by the humanitarian group. The ICRC, which has only facilitated previous releases of hostages throughout the war, said in March that it was "hugely disappointing" to have not yet been able to visit any hostages so far, emphasizing that it was not for lack of trying.

Stalled ceasefire talks

Recent ceasefire talks have borne little fruit, with Israeli and US negotiators recalled from negotiations last month. US Special Envoy Steve Witkoff at the time blamed Hamas for poor coordination and "lack of desire to reach a ceasefire," saying the US would consider "alternative options."

On Sunday, Netanyahu cited the latest images of Hamas captives as evidence of bad faith. "When I see this, I understand exactly what Hamas wants. They don't want a deal. They want to break us with these horrifying videos, with the false horror propaganda they're spreading around the world," he said.

The Israeli leader is now "pushing for the freeing of the hostages through military defeat (of Hamas)," one Israeli official told CNN on Sunday – a route that the hostages' families have repeatedly warned against.

"We are in discussions with the Americans. There is a growing understanding that Hamas is not interested in a deal," the official said, adding that Netanyahu wants to combine the freeing of the hostages "with the entry of humanitarian aid into areas outside the combat zones and, as much as possible, into areas not under Hamas control."

As Israel's war in Gaza grinds on, it has faced increasing resistance from the Israeli public, whose frustration over the fates of the remaining hostages has intensified.

According to polling released by the Israel Democracy Institute during a ceasefire period in March, over 70% of Israelis supported negotiating with Hamas for an end to the fighting and an Israeli withdrawal from Gaza in exchange for the release of the remaining hostages. Fifty hostages remain in Gaza, at least 20 of whom are believed to be alive.

The hostages' families have repeatedly urged Netanyahu to strike a deal, warning that Red Cross assistance alone will not be enough, and that further expansion of the fighting in Gaza could endanger the remaining hostages' lives.

"Netanyahu is preparing the greatest deception of all. The repeated claims of freeing hostages through military victory are a lie and a public fraud," Israel's Hostages and Missing Families Forum said in a statement on Sunday.

The group also condemned Hamas, saying it "cannot hide the fact that we are dealing with an evil terrorist organization that has been holding innocent people in impossible conditions for over 660 days."

Hamas publicly insists that it remains committed to hostage release talks – but only if conditions in Gaza improve first. The group recently stopped engaging in any discussions regarding a ceasefire or the release of hostages, two sources familiar with the matter told CNN last week.

"It is essential to improve the catastrophic humanitarian situation significantly and to obtain a written response from the enemy regarding our response," Basem Naim, a senior Hamas political official, also told CNN.

"This is a condition to go back to negotiations."

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Netanyahu asks Red Cross to help hostages in Gaza, as families warn against an ‘expanding war’

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New Photo - It's been a month since the deadly Texas floods. Survivors are grappling with trauma – and still waiting on financial help

It's been a month since the deadly Texas floods. Survivors are grappling with trauma – and still waiting on financial help Alaa Elassar, CNNAugust 4, 2025 at 4:00 PM Betty Matteson prays with volunteers who are helping to repair and rebuild her home.

- - It's been a month since the deadly Texas floods. Survivors are grappling with trauma – and still waiting on financial help

Alaa Elassar, CNNAugust 4, 2025 at 4:00 PM

Betty Matteson prays with volunteers who are helping to repair and rebuild her home. - Courtesy Shannon Swindle

Nine-year-old Cole Morris cowered in between his grandfather and seven of their family members, whispering prayers as rising floodwaters lapped furiously at the stairs of their attic.

"Are we going to die?" Cole asked his grandpa, his brown eyes wide with panic.

Barry Adelman thought they might. But he swallowed the truth, forced a smile, and hugged his grandson tightly.

"I told him that we were going to be just fine," Adelman told CNN. "I was scared to death, but I wasn't going to put fear in our grandson."

If the water had risen higher, it's likely his family wouldn't have survived, he said. At least 135 people, including more than 35 children, were killed in the catastrophic Central Texas flooding on July 4 that ravaged the region, including campsites filled with sleeping children.

Since that harrowing night, Adelman has felt haunted.

He's grappling with symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder, he says, compounded by the emotional toll of watching his family attempt to rebuild his grandmother's home — where, since 1968, four children, nine grandchildren, and countless great-grandchildren have gathered joyfully.

He can't stop replaying the image of body bags being pulled out of rescue helicopters, or the expression on a woman's face as she clung to a tree 25 feet above the ground – alive, but having lost her husband and two children.

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By morning, when floodwaters receded, Adelman's home was destroyed and their family's yard littered with over 40 vehicles. A 5-year-old's body was found on their property. Dozens of survivors clung to trees around them, stranded and separated from loved ones carried off by the river.

"The look of loss on their faces was really penetrating," Adelman said. "I'll never forget that look."

As he struggles with the lingering trauma – the screams for help, the near-drowning – he and his family are also navigating the financial fallout of an unexpected natural disaster, having lost their matriarch's home and six of the family's vehicles.

One month after the Texas floods, some survivors are sounding the alarm, pleading for help they say still hasn't arrived. Others are emerging from the nightmare with the support of a community rallying to clean up the devastation on their own.

It's a long and uncertain road, burdened by complex insurance claims, government red tape, and financial strain. It's also a psychological struggle – a quiet battle with the pain that stubbornly lingers for survivors after witnessing death and coming dangerously close to it.

"It just feels surreal, almost like I'm not supposed to be here," Adelman said. "Like I was in a murder scene and it was trying to get me, and now I'm suddenly dropped back into the real world."

'We need financial help and are not getting it'

For many survivors who lost their homes, it remains unclear how much support they'll receive from the Federal Emergency Management Agency and other government programs. Even if help comes, it won't be quick.

The average FEMA home repair payment for the flooding disaster is about $8,000, Madison Sloan, the director of the Disaster Recovery and Fair Housing Project at Texas Appleseed, told CNN, according to her analysis of FEMA's most recent public data.

This figure can be much higher or lower depending on the level of loss. But no matter the figure, it's unlikely it will be enough.

Betty Matteson's home was destroyed by the Texas floods in July. - Barry Adelman

"FEMA assistance is not intended to fully repair the home, it's intended to repair it so the home is safe to live in," Sloan said. "FEMA assistance can be hard to access and FEMA routinely sends denial letters. If you've just been through a disaster and you get a denial letter, that's a huge burden."

"The system is not set up as a safety net," she added. "It's set up to fill gaps in insurance and for people who can't afford or don't have certain kinds of insurance, there is not much there for them, besides private donations."

Adelman's 94-year-old grandmother, Betty Matteson, didn't have flood insurance because it was "nearly impossible to afford," according to Shannon Swindle, Matteson's granddaughter and Adelman's sister.

A week after the flood, Matteson was interviewed and assigned a case number by FEMA at an emergency disaster recovery center, where other charities were also on hand to help survivors apply for assistance, Swindle said.

"(My grandmother was told) the highest amount she could get for her house would be $43,600, but also would get more for personal items lost and also money for temporary housing, if approved," Swindle told CNN.

FEMA assistance is capped at $43,600, according to Sloan, but few families ever receive the full amount.

Betty Matteson is shown at her home before the flood. - Courtesy Shannon Swindle

The family was told it could take weeks to get a response and initial denials aren't uncommon as FEMA requests more information.

Flood survivor Bud Bolton, a resident of Hunt, Texas, says the aid has been painfully slow, and in some cases, nonexistent.

"The state and county are helping us none," Bolton told CNN. "I know people that lost their homes and sleeping in their cars still because they are not getting any of the funding. We don't need toilet paper, bottled water, and few necessities and gift cards. We need financial help and are not getting it."

Homeowners and renters in 10 counties are eligible to apply for federal disaster assistance if they were affected by last month's flooding. This includes survivors with losses in those counties, even if they do not live in those counties or in Texas, according to FEMA.

The State of Texas and the US Small Business Administration may also be able to help with serious disaster-related needs, temporary lodging, basic home repair costs, personal property loss and disaster loans, FEMA said.

FEMA has not responded to CNN's request for comment.

Survivors can also request public assistance through the Texas Division of Emergency Management, the American Red Cross, 211 Texas, and local charity organizations.

Communities taking care of their own

As Adelman and Swindle's family awaits FEMA's reply, they say they are receiving the most support from local and distant Texas communities that have stepped in.

"We need help. All kinds of help. Financial support, supplies, clean-up help, or even just sharing this story with others who might be able to give," Swindle wrote in a GoFundMe campaign for her grandmother that has so far raised more than $75,000. The estimated cost of repairing their family's home is $600,000.

Volunteers from Cypress Creek Church in Wimberley, Texas, learned about the family when a regular customer at Swindle's business submitted a prayer request at the church. Since then, a team of volunteers has visited the house three times a week to remove cabinets and bathtubs, clear areas where water had pooled and mold began to grow, and tear out the drywall.

The owners of the Full Moon Inn in nearby Luckenbach, Texas, also rallied a large team to assist with the cleaning process for a day.

"Without all of you, none of this would be possible," Swindle wrote in the GoFundMe campaign. "You have done more than offer money. You have given my grandmother hope."

Though the family is thankful for the help they've received, frustration and uncertainty weigh heavily on them as they await answers from the government.

"We want clear answers on when the electricity will be restored and how. There's a lot of information that is needed when faced with rebuilding and in many cases we can't move forward without that information and approval," Swindle said.

Volunteers remove moldy parts of Betty Matteson's flood-damaged home. - Courtesy Shannon Swindle

Their concern goes beyond their own struggles; they are troubled by the thought of other survivors who haven't been as fortunate in securing assistance or receiving donations that could mean the difference between recovery and despair.

Many people who lost their vehicles and only had liability insurance can't get to work, adding another layer of hardship. Meanwhile, people with disabilities are left without vital medical equipment, including walkers, wheelchairs, canes, and hearing aids.

Swindle believes the road to recovery will be long and difficult, with survivors left to shoulder much of the burden themselves.

"People move on. Volunteers go back to their daily normal lives, but the people affected are still knee-deep in it and will be for months and, in some cases, years to come."

Finding a way to live around the trauma

Keli Rabon's two sons, ages 7 and 9, survived the floods that devastated Camp La Junta, a Texas summer camp for boys. She says her younger son, Brock, now lives in a constant state of anxiety and needs mental health care.

"Today, my sons are physically safe, but for our family, the storm is not over," Rabon said during a committee hearing in Kerrville, Texas, on Thursday.

"Brock scans every room for higher ground. He checks the weather constantly. He battles nightmares of water dripping from the ceiling or his mattress being wet. His fear is so profound that he's now anxious about the tsunami in Hawaii. He lives with the terror that no child or any person should have to carry, but so many of us now do."

Brock's cabin flooded so severely that the children and counselors had to cling to the roof rafters to survive. Rabon noted since her family was only visiting Kerr County and has since returned home to Houston, they haven't been offered any mental health support — something she believes is a serious oversight.

"If you get to enjoy the fruits of tourism, but then don't support the tourists when a disaster happens, that just doesn't make sense to me," Rabon told CNN.

Barry Adelman and his grandson Cole Morris. - Courtesy Tara Adelman

Adelman has returned to Hunt three times since the flood. During his first visit, he watched as cadaver dogs combed the riverside, searching for the remains of those still missing at the time, 27 of whom were children.

Seeing this triggered his first panic attack.

Adelman has not been offered mental health resources through the government but has seen a therapist twice on his own. Weeks have passed, yet he still fights tears when watching videos of his grandmother's neighbors in Hunt, painstakingly piecing their lives back together.

He struggles to return to work, hold simple conversations, or quiet the constant replay of every vivid detail from that night.

"Every day it gets a little bit better," Adelman said. "But I don't know if I will ever be the same."

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It’s been a month since the deadly Texas floods. Survivors are grappling with trauma – and still waiting on financial help

It's been a month since the deadly Texas floods. Survivors are grappling with trauma – and still waiting on fi...
New Photo - Prison riot leaves 7 inmates dead, 11 injured in Mexico

Prison riot leaves 7 inmates dead, 11 injured in Mexico CBSNews August 4, 2025 at 8:05 PM Veracruz state security ministry Seven inmates died amid unrest at a prison in the eastern Mexico state of Veracruz, authorities said Sunday, with 11 other prisoners suffering injuries.

- - Prison riot leaves 7 inmates dead, 11 injured in Mexico

CBSNews August 4, 2025 at 8:05 PM

Veracruz state security ministry

Seven inmates died amid unrest at a prison in the eastern Mexico state of Veracruz, authorities said Sunday, with 11 other prisoners suffering injuries.

The fighting first broke out Saturday afternoon at a facility in Tuxpan and continued throughout the night, officials said.

Veracruz state forces, along with military support, carried out a "coordinated operation" and were able to get into the prison by Sunday morning and regain control, said a statement from the state security ministry.

"As a result of the riot, we report the tragic deaths of seven inmates and 11 injured people," the statement said.

After the fight, three inmates were transferred to another prison in Veracruz, though authorities did not disclose specifics.

Local media reported that the prisoners started the riot after asking authorities to guarantee their safety when faced with threats from inmates who were accused of being part of a violent criminal group called Sombra.

Conflicts between cartels and other organized crime groups in Mexico are often replicated in prison populations, which struggle with overcrowding.

Last month, a prison riot in the northwestern state of Sinaloa left three inmates dead.

Politicians have also been targeted by violence in Veracruz in recent months. In May, a mayoral candidate and three of her supporters were shot dead at a campaign event in the state. Last December, a Mexican congressman who was a member of the ruling coalition was shot dead in Veracruz.

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Prison riot leaves 7 inmates dead, 11 injured in Mexico

Prison riot leaves 7 inmates dead, 11 injured in Mexico CBSNews August 4, 2025 at 8:05 PM Veracruz state security ...

 

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