Apple's new iPhone SE is just $399 – What's to lose? Here’s what you need to know. If Apple's new iPhone is just $399, why not just buy that one, instead of forking over $699, $999 or $1,099 for the bigger iPhone versions? What's to lose? How bad could be? Tom Hiddleston on Coriolanus: 'There was nowhere to hide – that's exciting' Coriolanus is a play that’s more respected than revered. Why does it have a rather difficult reputation?Coriolanus is relentless, brutal, savage and serious, but that’s why I find it interesting.
Lindsey Graham campaign ad features image of opponent with digitally altered darker skin tone The campaign ad, uploaded to Graham's Facebook on July 23, includes an image of his Senate rival Jaime Harrison that was originally published in the New York Times. The version of the image in Graham's ad, however, shows Harrison surrounded by a dark, portrait-style background effect with a notably darker skin tone. "Hollywood continues to bankroll my opponent, raising tens of thousands in campaign cash to attack me -- but they fail to understand this simple fact: South Carolinians won't stand for Radical Leftists telling them how to think and how to vote," the Facebook post states. "Are you with me?" The Graham campaign told CNN an effect was used in creating the ad but pointed to past Facebook advertisements in which they said the same effect was used on Graham's face, and called the issues raised about it a "non-story." "The artistic effect used, the same one that was used on Senator Graham just two days before in a video, is a non-story.
Philadelphia teacher and activist facing federal charges related to George Floyd riots Four men -- including a social studies teacher who is also a prominent outspoken activist -- were named Thursday in a federal indictment related to unrest in Philadelphia days after the police killing of George Floyd. Anthony David Ale Smith, 29, and Khalif Miller, 25, both of Philadelphia, and Atlantic City, N.J., resident Carlos Matchett face two arson counts related to the setting of a Philadelphia police vehicle on fire, the Justice Department said. In a separate case, Ayoub Tabri, 24, of Arlington, Va., is charged with setting a Pennsylvania State Police SUV ablaze. Both incidents occurred on May 30.
Stock futures trade higher as oil decline continues The Nasdaq and S&P 500 recouped all of last week's losses, but FOX Business' Lauren Simonetti reports oil is still plunging due to oversupply and storage concerns. Get all the latest news on coronavirus and more delivered daily to your inbox. Sign up here. U.S. equity futures are pointing to a higher open ahead of the start of the Federal Reserve's two-day policy meeting as oil prices continue to trend lower. Dow Industrial futures are pointing to a gain of 0.4 percent ahead of the Tuesday trading session.
Anson Dorrance: 'We raise young women to not be competitive. What the heck is going on?' “When I was hired the United States had never won a game in international competition. Five years later, we were world champions. The way we established the United States is the same way I established my collegiate programme,” says Anson Dorrance, head coach of the University of North Carolina women’s football team. If you are reading this in the US, you will most likely have heard of Dorrance. Trump again attempts to stoke racial divisions in housing message Trumpeting his rollback of an Obama-era rule meant to combat segregation, Trump informed "all of the people living their Suburban Lifestyle Dream that you will no longer be bothered or financially hurt by having low income housing built in your neighborhood." "Your housing prices will go up based on the market, and crime will go down," Trump went on in his message posted to Twitter. "I have rescinded the Obama-Biden AFFH Rule. Enjoy!" Speaking in Texas later, Trump underscored his view that affordable housing has no place in American suburbs. "You know, the suburbs, people fight all of their lives to get into the suburbs and have a beautiful home.
Covid-19 News: Live Updates In April, the coronavirus killed more than 10,000 people in New York City. By early May, nearly 50,000 nursing home residents and their caregivers across the United States had died. But as the virus continued its rampage over the summer and fall, infecting nearly 8.5 million Americans, survival rates, even for seriously ill patients, appeared to be improving.
Coronavirus: Trump orders meatpacking plants to stay open Image copyright EPA US President Donald Trump has ordered meat processing plants to stay open to protect the nation's food supply amid the coronavirus pandemic. He invoked a Korean War-era law from the 1950s to mandate that the plants continue to function, amid industry warnings of strain on the supply chain. An estimated 3,300 US meatpacking workers have been diagnosed with coronavirus and 20 have died. The UN last month warned the emergency threatened global food supply chains. Twenty-two US meatpacking plants across the American Midwest have closed during the outbreak.
'As guarded as Fort Knox': the inside story of Hillary Clinton's presidential campaign Shortly before midnight on 8 November 2016, Hillary Rodham Clinton dozed off in the bedroom of her Manhattan hotel. The presidential candidate was exhausted from the rigours of a bruising election campaign and rattled by a flurry of early results that suggested the verdict was far from a foregone conclusion. She closed her eyes as the slight favourite to become the US’s first female president. She opened them to a nightmare and a world turned upside down. Clinton’s shock loss to Donald Trump – the embodiment of chaos to her bastion of control – left so much destruction in its wake (a victory party mothballed, shell-shocked staffers out of work, 66m futile votes) that it was easy to overlook the small matter of 2,000 hours of behind-the-scenes campaign footage, shot in a spirit of cautious optimism but now left to languish. Clinton’s office suggested cobbling it together as an official record, an insider’s account of what went wrong.