Children found stabbed in burning building in Chicago's Logan Square neighborhoodNew Foto - Children found stabbed in burning building in Chicago's Logan Square neighborhood

Three children were found stabbed in a burning building in Chicago's Logan Square neighborhood on the Fourth of July, sources told NBC Chicago. The blaze was first reported around 10 a.m. local time Friday in the 3600 block of West Palmer. Sources said three young stabbing victims were found and transported to an area hospital for treatment. One was believed to be in serious condition while the conditions of the others were not immediately known. A source familiar with the investigation later told NBC Chicago that one child had died from their injuries. Ground stop issued at O'Hare Airport on Fourth of July due to thunderstorms: FAA Dozens of Chicago suburbs to hold 4th of July fireworks for 2025: Full list 'No fireworks July 4:' Why Navy Pier isn't holding a 4th of July fireworks show in Chicago A first responder was also being treated for smoke injures and an adult woman was taken by police from the home to an area hospital in unknown condition. The flames ultimately spread to a neighboring home and a second adult woman was hospitalized for smoke inhalation, sources said. Further details surrounding the chaotic scene have not yet been released by authorities. Crews were still working on the flames as of 11 a.m. Friday.

Children found stabbed in burning building in Chicago's Logan Square neighborhood

Children found stabbed in burning building in Chicago's Logan Square neighborhood Three children were found stabbed in a burning buildin...
Hamas says it responds to Gaza ceasefire proposal in 'a positive spirit'New Foto - Hamas says it responds to Gaza ceasefire proposal in 'a positive spirit'

By Nidal al-Mughrabi and Alexander Cornwell CAIRO/TEL AVIV (Reuters) -Hamas said it had responded on Friday in "a positive spirit" to a U.S.-brokered Gaza ceasefire proposal and was prepared to enter into talks on implementing the deal, which envisages a release of hostages and negotiations on ending the conflict. U.S. President Donald Trump earlier announced a "final proposal" for a 60-day ceasefire in the nearly 21-month-old war between Israel and Hamas, stating he anticipated a reply from the parties in coming hours. Hamas wrote on its official website: "The Hamas movement has completed its internal consultations as well as discussions with Palestinian factions and forces regarding the latest proposal by the mediators to halt the aggression against our people in Gaza. "The movement has delivered its response to the brotherly mediators, which was characterized by a positive spirit. Hamas is fully prepared, with all seriousness, to immediately enter a new round of negotiations on the mechanism for implementing this framework," the statement said. In a sign of potential challenges still facing the sides, a Palestinian official of a militant group allied with Hamas said concerns remained over humanitarian aid, passage through the Rafah crossing to Egypt and clarity over a timetable of Israeli troop withdrawals. Trump said on Tuesday that Israel had agreed "to the necessary conditions to finalize" a 60-day ceasefire, during which efforts would be made to end the U.S. ally's war in the Palestinian enclave. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who is due to meet Trump in Washington on Monday, has yet to comment on Trump's announcement, and in their public statements the two sides remain far apart. Netanyahu has repeatedly said Hamas must be disarmed, a position the militant group, which is thought to be holding 20 living hostages, has so far refused to discuss. Israeli media cited an Israeli official as saying that Israel had received and was looking into Hamas' response to the ceasefire proposal. An Egyptian security official told Reuters that Egypt, which along with Qatar is mediating ceasefire efforts, had seen Hamas' response and said: "It includes positive signs that an agreement is near, but there are some demands from Hamas that need to be worked on." Trump has said he would be "very firm" with Netanyahu on the need for a speedy Gaza ceasefire, while noting that the Israeli leader wants one as well. "We hope it's going to happen. And we're looking forward to it happening sometime next week," he told reporters earlier this week. "We want to get the hostages out." ATTACKS OVERNIGHT Israeli attacks have killed at least 138 Palestinians in Gaza over the past 24 hours, local health officials said. Health officials at the Nasser Hospital in Khan Younis, southern Gaza, said the Israeli military had carried out an airstrike on a tent encampment west of the city around 2 a.m., killing 15 Palestinians displaced by nearly two years of war. The Israeli military said troops operating in the Khan Younis area had eliminated militants, confiscated weapons and dismantled Hamas outposts in the last 24 hours, while striking 100 targets across Gaza, including military structures, weapons storage facilities and launchers. Later on Friday, Palestinians gathered to perform funeral prayers before burying those killed overnight. "There should have been a ceasefire long ago before I lost my brother," said 13-year-old Mayar Al Farr as she wept. Her brother, Mahmoud, was shot dead in another incident, she said. "He went to get aid, so he can get a bag of flour for us to eat. He got a bullet in his neck," she said. 'MAKE THE DEAL' In Tel Aviv, families and friends of hostages held in Gaza were among demonstrators who gathered outside a U.S. Embassy building on U.S. Independence Day, calling on Trump to secure a deal for all of the captives. Demonstrators set up a symbolic Sabbath dinner table, placing 50 empty chairs to represent those who are still held in Gaza. Banners hung nearby displaying a post by Trump from his Truth Social platform that read, "MAKE THE DEAL IN GAZA. GET THE HOSTAGES BACK!!!" "Only you can make the deal. We want one beautiful deal. One beautiful hostage deal," said Gideon Rosenberg, 48, from Tel Aviv. Rosenberg was wearing a shirt with the image of hostage Avinatan Or, one of his employees who was abducted by Palestinian militants from the Nova musical festival on October 7, 2023. He is among the 20 hostages who are believed to be alive after more than 600 days of captivity. An official familiar with the negotiations said on Thursday that the proposal envisages the return of 10 of the hostages during the 60 days, along with the bodies of 18 others who had died since being taken hostage. Ruby Chen, 55, the father of 19-year-old American-Israeli Itay, who is believed to have been killed after being taken captive, urged Netanyahu to return from meeting with Trump with a deal that brings back all hostages. Itay Chen, also a German national, was serving as an Israeli soldier when Hamas carried out its surprise attack on October 7, 2023, killing around 1,200 people, mostly civilians, and taking another 251 hostage. Israel's retaliatory war against Hamas has devastated Gaza, which the militant group has ruled for almost two decades but now only controls in parts, displacing most of the population of more than 2 million and triggering widespread hunger. More than 57,000 Palestinians have been killed in nearly two years of fighting, most of them civilians, according to local health officials. (Reporting by Alexander Cornwell in Tel Aviv, Nidal al-Mughrabi and Menna Alaa El Din in Cairo, Hatem Khaled in Gaza, Howard Goller in New York and David Brunnstrom in Washington; Editing by Alex Richardson, Philippa Fletcher and Rosalba O'Brien)

Hamas says it responds to Gaza ceasefire proposal in 'a positive spirit'

Hamas says it responds to Gaza ceasefire proposal in 'a positive spirit' By Nidal al-Mughrabi and Alexander Cornwell CAIRO/TEL AVIV ...
Bad Bunny Takes Shots at Trump's Immigration Policies in Music Video for 'Nuevayol'New Foto - Bad Bunny Takes Shots at Trump's Immigration Policies in Music Video for 'Nuevayol'

Bad Bunny/YouTube Bad Bunny released the video for his latest single, "NUEVAYoL", on Friday, July 4 It features a voice that has an uncanny similarity to President Donald Trump In the video — which comes days after Trump toured the newly opened I.C.E. detention facility "Alligator Alcatraz," — the voice apologizes to Americans, stating that the country "is nothing without immigrants" Bad Bunnydropped the video for his single "NUEVAYoL" on Friday, July 4, featuring a cameo from a voice that sounds suspiciously like PresidentDonald Trump. The retro-styled video, directed by Renell Medrano, begins with scenes of the Puerto Rican artist attending a classic-looking quinceañera, complete with a nervous 15-year-old honoree, dancing chambelanes and a host of raucous family members. The song, from Bad Bunny's latest album,Debí Tirar Más Fotos, samples "Un Verano en Nueva York" by Andy Montañez and El Gran Combo de Puerto Rico, adding to the retro feel. However, in keeping with the 31-year-old artist's recent releases, there are also a few pointed political messages. One shot of the video shows Bad Bunny saluting from the crown of the Statue of Liberty, which has been draped in a Puerto Rican flag. Immediately following that shot, the video cuts to a group of men standing around a 1970s-style boombox. The voice emanating from the speaker is a soundalike of President Trump, only the words are nothing like his usual rhetoric.' "I made a mistake," the voice says. "I want to apologize to the immigrants in America. I mean the United States. I know America is the whole continent." Bad Bunny/YouTube "I want to say that this country is nothing without the immigrants. This country is nothing without Mexicans, Dominicans, Puerto Ricans, Colombians, Venezuelans, Cubans," it continues, before the men shut it off and walk away. The video ends with images of the Puerto Rican diaspora in New York, some in black and white, but all keeping with the retro feel. It ends with a simple message in text: "juntos somos mas fuertes," or "together we are stronger." The "NUEVAYoL" video follows a week of the administration's continued escalation of anti-immigration policies. Bad Bunny/YouTube On Tuesday, July 1, Trump toured the newly opened "Alligator Alcatraz," an I.C.E. detention facility built in the Florida Everglades in just eight days. The massive warehouse, full of chain link dividers and hundreds of bunk beds, will be a holding area for up to 5,000 ICE detainees. The administration has touted the area's surrounding wildlife — which includes alligators, panthers and pythons — as an added measure of security. "You don't always have land so beautiful and so secure [with] a lot of bodyguards and a lot of cops in the form of alligators that you don't have to pay them so much," Trumptold reporters. Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE's free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories. Recent years have seen Bad Bunny using his platform to send more and more powerful political messages, in his music — particularlyDebí Tirar Más Fotos— and beyond. After comedian Tony Hinchcliffecalled Puerto Rico a "floating island of garbage"during a Trump rally at Madison Square Garden last October, Bad Bunny released an eight-minute video celebrating his homeland. Captioned simply "garbage," the clip — which was originally shown before 2021 Bad Bunny concerts in Puerto Rico, but never released publicly — highlighted the island's sporting legends and musical innovations, praising the nation as "the definition of heart and resistance." In a January 2025 interview withRolling Stone, Bad Bunny opened up about his decision to be more outspoken about his political beliefs and the criticism that might come from it. "People are used to artists getting big and mainstream and not expressing themselves about these things, or if they do, talking about it in a super careful way," he said. "But I'm going to talk, and whoever doesn't like it doesn't have to listen to me." Read the original article onPeople

Bad Bunny Takes Shots at Trump's Immigration Policies in Music Video for 'Nuevayol'

Bad Bunny Takes Shots at Trump's Immigration Policies in Music Video for 'Nuevayol' Bad Bunny/YouTube Bad Bunny released the vid...
Mark Snow, 'X-Files,' 'Ghost Whisperer,' 'Blue Bloods' Composer, Dies at 78New Foto - Mark Snow, 'X-Files,' 'Ghost Whisperer,' 'Blue Bloods' Composer, Dies at 78

Mark Snow, the veteran television composer who turned "The X-Files" theme into an unlikely chart hit in the 1990s, died Friday at his home in Connecticut. He was 78. A 15-time Emmy nominee, he not only scored more than 200 episodes of Chris Carter's spooky Fox series (and both its big-screen incarnations, all starring David Duchovny and Gillian Anderson), he also provided the music for other series including "Hart to Hart," "T.J. Hooker," "Smallville," "The Ghost Whisperer" and "Blue Bloods." More from Variety Lalo Schifrin, Prolific Film Composer Who Wrote 'Mission: Impossible' Theme, Dies at 93 'Blue Bloods' Spinoff 'Boston Blue' Casts Gloria Reuben How the 'Andor' Score Went for Maximum Strength While 'The Studio' Composer Acted Solo Six of his 15 Emmy nominations were for "The X-Files," but five others were for such high rated TV movies and miniseries, including "Something About Amelia," "An American Story," "Oldest Living Confederate Widow Tells All," "Children of the Dust" and "Helter Skelter." The Juilliard-trained composer started out, like most TV composers in the 1970s, writing for full orchestra, but Snow was among the first to transition to the all-electronic milieu in the late 1980s, working alone in his home studio. All of the "X-Files" TV music (sometimes as much as 40 minutes per weekly episode) was created on his synthesizers, samplers and other music-making machines. Composer Sean Callery ("24"), who considered Snow a mentor and then close friend of more than three decades, toldVariety: "His limitless talent and boundless creativity was matched only by the generosity he bestowed upon other composers who sought his guidance. He would give the most inspiring and intelligent feedback when listening to the work of other young artists (myself included). He combined his decades of experience with the encouragement that composers cultivate: to trust in themselves, embrace their own unique voice, and learn to rely on their own instincts. And he did so with a humor and self-deprecation that made his wisdom all the more enduring." Snow recalled coming up with an echoing rhythmic figure, then adding an eerie, whistling melody atop it, as he was scoring the pilot for "The X-Files" in 1993. He was amused when it became a top-10 hit in England, Ireland, France and across Europe in 1996, saying, "Nothing really big happens in the song. It stays in A-minor, there's no singing, drums or guitars, and it was a smash hit. That's pretty wild." Callery believes Snow's "X-Files" scores "brought an entirely new language of musical storytelling to television." Snow also scored Carter's other series, "Millennium," "Harsh Realm" and "The Lone Gunmen," and earned another Emmy nomination for his theme for "Nowhere Man" in 1996. As he explained in a 2016 Television Academy interview: "It took quite a few years to get to where I felt comfortable with the electronics, trying to make something that approximated melodic music. Mostly it was used for ambient sound-effect type scores. But the technology kept changing so quickly. There was much more control, and the spectrum of sound really warmed up and started to breathe. These electronic instruments could really make something approximating music. [Now] I have my keyboard, here's the show on the screen in front of me, and I just start playing along with it. I improvise, and then I hit on something I like, and I go over it again and again." He also wrote the music for the final four films of acclaimed French filmmaker Alain Resnais, earning a César nomination for the first, 2007's "Private Fears in Public Places." He was born Martin Fulterman on Aug. 26, 1946, in Brooklyn. He began piano studies at 10, later adding drums and oboe to his repertoire. He studied at New York's High School of Music and Art and soon befriended another future film composer, Michael Kamen ("Lethal Weapon," "Die Hard"). The two became roommates when both went on to study at the Juilliard School of Music from 1964 to 1968. They co-founded the New York Rock & Roll Ensemble to perform both classical and innovative pop music. Immediately signed to Atlantic Records, they went on to record and perform for the next five years (including a 1969 appearance on Leonard Bernstein's televised "Young People's Concerts"). In 1974, after a brief stint as a record producer, he moved to Los Angeles, where his brother-in-law, actor Georg Stanford Brown, convinced producer Aaron Spelling to take a chance on the young composer by commissioning a score for ABC's "The Rookies." It was on this first of six "Rookies" scores that Martin Fulterman adopted the pseudonym Mark Snow (initially to dodge threats from his previous employer, it became his professional moniker). He soon became busy in episodic TV, writing scores for "Starsky & Hutch" (including its third-season theme), "Gemini Man," "Family" and other series. He also studied with veteran TV composer Earle Hagen ("The Andy Griffith Show") and serial music teacher George Tremblay to improve his scoring techniques. "Hart to Hart," the Robert Wagner-Stefanie Powers romantic drama, was his first big hit, composing the theme and more than 90 scores for the ABC series. He went on to write the theme and early scores for William Shatner's "T.J. Hooker," the theme for Jack Warden's "Crazy Like a Fox," and scores for such other series as "The Love Boat," "Dynasty," "Vega$," "Cagney & Lacey" and "Falcon Crest." In the aftermath of his 1990s success with the "X-Files" music, Snow scored the first six seasons of "Smallville" for the WB network, all five seasons of "Ghost Whisperer" on CBS (earning two more Emmy nominations) and nearly 290 episodes of the long-running Tom Selleck family police drama "Blue Bloods" on CBS. Among his other TV movies and miniseries were "The Boy in the Plastic Bubble" with John Travolta, HBO's "Vietnam War Stories," the Louis L'Amour western "Down the Long Hills," "Murder Ordained" with Keith Carradine, "Everybody's Baby: The Rescue of Jessica McClure," "The Lost Capone," six "In the Line of Duty" films including "Siege at Waco," "A Woman Scored: The Betty Broderick Story" with Meredith Baxter, "The Day Lincoln Was Shot" with Rob Morrow, and "20,000 Leagues Under the Sea" starring Michael Caine. His other feature films included "Ernest Saves Christmas," "Cold Dog Soup" produced by George Harrison's Handmade Films," Antonio Banderas' debut as director "Crazy in Alabama," Marvel Entertainment's "The New Mutants" and the two "X-Files" films, "The X-Files" and "The X-Files: I Want to Believe," both of which departed from the all-electronic TV style in favor of traditional orchestral scores. In addition to his Emmy nominations, Snow received ASCAP's Golden Note Award in 2005 "in recognition of his unprecedented success as one of the most versatile and popular composers in television and film" and a Career Achievement Award from the TV Academy's music peer group in 2014. Among the survivors are his wife Glynnis, plus three daughters and grandchildren. Best of Variety Oscars 2026: George Clooney, Jennifer Lopez, Julia Roberts, Wagner Moura and More Among Early Contenders to Watch New Movies Out Now in Theaters: What to See This Week 'Harry Potter' TV Show Cast Guide: Who's Who in Hogwarts? Sign up forVariety's Newsletter. For the latest news, follow us onFacebook,Twitter, andInstagram.

Mark Snow, ‘X-Files,’ ‘Ghost Whisperer,’ ‘Blue Bloods’ Composer, Dies at 78

Mark Snow, 'X-Files,' 'Ghost Whisperer,' 'Blue Bloods' Composer, Dies at 78 Mark Snow, the veteran television compos...
Judge briefly blocks immigrants' deportation to South Sudan, but legal path eventually clearedNew Foto - Judge briefly blocks immigrants' deportation to South Sudan, but legal path eventually cleared

Despite a federal judge briefly halting deportations of eightimmigrantsto war-torn South Sudan, he and a second judge eventually cleared the wat for the Trump administration to relocate the immigrants the day after the Supreme Courtgreenlighted their removal. The unusually-busy Fourth of July court schedule began with District Judge Randolph Moss in Washington, D.C., putting a temporary hold on the deportations while he evaluated a last-ditch appeal by the immigrants' lawyers. In an afternoon hearing, he decided he was powerless to halt their removals and that the person best positioned to rule on the request was Brian Murphy, the federal judge in Boston whose rulings led to the initial halt of the administration's effort to begin deportations to the eastern African country. But on Friday evening, Murphy issued a brief ruling concluding that the Supreme Court had tied his hands. "This Court interprets these Supreme Court orders as binding on this new petition, as Petitioners are now raising substantially similar claims, and therefore Petitioners motion is denied," Murphy wrote. The administration had earlier said it intended Friday to move the immigrants from the U.S. naval base in Djibouti, where they and their guards have lingered for weeks as their case has ricocheted through the courts, to South Sudan. The administration has been trying to deport the immigrants for weeks. None are from South Sudan, which is enmeshed in civil war and where the U.S government has advised against travel. The government flew them to Djibouti but couldn't move them further because Murphy had ruled no immigrant could be sent to a new country without a chance to have a court hearing. The Supreme Courtvacated that decisionlast month, then issued a new order Thursday night clarifying that it meant the immigrants could be moved to South Sudan. Lawyers for the immigrants, who hail from Laos, Mexico, Myanmar, Vietnam and other countries, filed an emergency request to halt their removal later that night. The temporary stay was first reported by legal journalist Chris Geidner.

Judge briefly blocks immigrants' deportation to South Sudan, but legal path eventually cleared

Judge briefly blocks immigrants' deportation to South Sudan, but legal path eventually cleared Despite a federal judge briefly halting d...

 

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