John McCain funeral: Watch as Joe Biden delivers eulogy for his longtime friend

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John McCain funeral: Watch as Joe Biden delivers eulogy for his longtime friend

Former Vice President Joe Biden will deliver the eulogy at a private memorial service in Phoenix for his longtime friend, Senator John McCain.

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The world knew John McCain as a senator, presidential candidate, veterans advocate and prisoner of war, but Vice President Joe Biden tweeted “to me, more than anything, John was a friend. He will be missed dearly.”

On Thursday, Biden will deliver a eulogy for McCain during a private memorial service at North Phoenix Baptist Church. It’s just on one of several commemorations in Arizona, Washington and Maryland this week honoring McCain’s life and decades of service to the nation. 

He and Biden served together in the U.S. Senate for more than 20 years and forged a friendship beyond party lines

Speaking on “The View” alongside Meghan McCain in December, Biden said: “Her dad is one of my best friends. Her dad goes after me, hammer and tong. We’re like two brothers who were somehow raised by different fathers because of our points of view. But I know — and I mean this sincerely — even when your dad got mad at me and said I should get the hell off the ticket … I know if I picked up the phone tonight and called John McCain and said, ‘John, I’m at 2nd and Vine in Oshkosh and I need your help,’ he’d get on a plane and come.”

More: Nation’s capital prepares a hero’s welcome for John McCain

USA TODAY is providing extended coverage of McCain’s memorial events, including Thursday’s private service in Phoenix. You can watch it live in the player above starting at 1 p.m. ET. 

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Senator John McCain devoted his life to serving our country.
USA TODAY

 

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The U.S. Open says it regrets warning a female tennis player for taking off her shirt

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Alizé Cornet of France at a press conference.
Alizé Cornet of France at a press conference.

Image: Corbis via Getty Images

Sometimes, a good public outcry is all you need.

After female tennis player Alizé Cornet briefly removed her shirt while changing on the court of the U.S. Open on Wednesday, the umpire issued her a warning — and immediately incited outrage. Fans complained that similar warnings had not been issued to male tennis players.

On Wednesday, the U.S. Open actually responded to complaints and issued a public apology.

“We regret that a Code Violation was assessed to Ms. Cornet yesterday,” the statement said, according to BuzzFeed News. “We have clarified the policy to ensure this will not happen moving forward.”

U.S. Open Director of Communications Chris Widmaier clarified the new policy on Wednesday.

“Players who do change their shirts will not be assessed a code violation … We regret that Ms. Cornet was assessed a code violation. However, luckily, she was assessed a warning only and there was no further penalty above a warning.”

“When possible, if a more private location is near a court and is requested, that player will be allowed to go to that private location to change, and they will not be assessed a bathroom break.”

This seems…reasonable. Earlier on Wednesday, the Women’s Tennis Association released a statement of its own, stating that it does not have a “rule against a change of attire on court.”

One step forward for gender equality, one leap forward for Twitter outrage.

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Bazzi Wrote NCT Dream’s New Single ‘We Go Up’ And It’s A Total Earworm

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Fresh off the viral success of his breakthrough single “Mine” and his debut album Cosmic — which scored him a MTV Video Music Award nomination for Best New Artist — singer-songwriter Bazzi is back with another hit: NCT Dream’s “We Go Up.”

SM Entertainment dropped the vibrant visual for the K-pop group’s fizzy comeback single today (August 30), and it’s a total bop. Co-written by Bazzi — graduating Dream member and rapper Mark also participated in the songwriting process — “We Go Up” combines old-school hip-hop sensibilities with bells, bass, and a catchy vocal hook. The track was produced by MZMC and SM’s own Korean hitmaker Kenzie.

“Was sooo fun writing this one!” Bazzi wrote on Instagram. “My boys in [NCT] snapped. Miss u guys.”

Beyond its poppy visuals and hyped choreography, “We Go Up” also demonstrates NCT Dream’s growth — visually and musically. Since NCT’s inception, Dream has been its youngest unit and their music has mostly been marketed toward teens, from rebellious anthems like “Go” to bubblegum bops like “Chewing Gum.” But “We Go Up” signifies a noticeable maturity and the start of something new and exciting for the group.

NCT Dream is set to release their six-song EP “We Go Up” on September 3. The release marks the start of NCT’s comeback season, with Seoul unit NCT 127 planned to follow and the new NCT China unit set to debut at the end of the year.

As for Bazzi, this isn’t his first time writing a K-pop banger. He also worked on Korean superstars EXO’s “The Eve,” off their celebrated 2017 album, The War.

“I don’t really like to think too far ahead when it comes to the music,” Bazzi recently told MTV News, describing his process as “really in the moment.” Watch our full interview with Bazzi below:

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Champions League draw and Uefa awards

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Champions League draw and Uefa awards – Live – BBC Sport


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Summary

  1. English teams await Champions League group draw
  2. Man City in pot one (top seeds)
  3. Man Utd and Spurs in pot two
  4. Liverpool – last season’s finalists – in pot three
  5. Uefa men’s and women’s player of the year to be announced


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Vice President Pence gives his take on Trump’s warning of violence if Democrats take control of Congress

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President Trump says evangelical Christians thank him more for moving the US Embassy to Jerusalem than Jewish people.
Buzz60

WASHINGTON – Weighing in on President Donald Trump’s warning that there will be violence by his opponents if Democrats win control of Congress this fall, Vice President Mike Pence said he took the president to mean that Democrats want to undo everything Trump has done.

“But the president’s point as I took it, from where I was seated, was that the Democrat party in Congress is absolutely committed to reversing everything that we’ve been able to for the American people,” Pence told the Christian Broadcasting Network in an interview excerpt that aired Thursday.

On Monday, Trump and Pence feted dozens of Christian pastors, ministers and other supporters from the evangelical community at a White House dinner.

Trump warned that Democrats “will overturn everything that we’ve done and they’ll do it quickly and violently,” according to an audiotape of his remarks provided to The New York Timesby someone who attended the event.

Asked by reporters Wednesday what he meant by comments, Trump said, “I just hope there won’t be violence.”

“There’s a lot of unnecessary violence all over the world, but also in this country, and I don’t want to see it,” he said.

In his remarks to evangelicals, Trump mentioned antifa, the name for loosely affiliated, left-leaning anti-racist groups that monitor and track the activities of local neo-Nazis. 

“When you look at antifa, and you look at some of these groups, these are violent people,” Trump said, according to the Times. 

Asked by CBN News why Trump mentioned antifa, Pence said: “Obviously we condemn any examples of violence on the streets of this country, zero tolerance for any violence against Americans.”

Pence said the reason why evangelical leaders were invited to the dinner was to make sure that the American people know that Democrats want to reverse Trump’s agenda, including his appointment of “strong conservatives” to the federal courts.

“That’s the choice we face,” he said. “That’s what I took the president to say.”

Trump’s 2016 victory was boosted by while evangelicals, 81 percent of whom voted for him. That’s a greater share than the support garnered by George W. Bush in 2004, John McCain in 2008 or Mitt Romney in 2012.

And evangelical leaders say Trump has delivered on promises to promote “religious freedoms,” restrict abortions, appoint conservative judges, and recognize Jerusalem as the capital of Israel.

More: First year of Trump-Pence brings bountiful blessings, religious conservatives say

More: Mike Pence, ‘Christian supremacist’: 6 key takeaways from a new book

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This life-size Bugatti Chiron model is made of 1 million Lego pieces

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If a real Bugatti Chiron sports car will set you back $3 million, might we suggest to you this life-sized, functioning Lego version, which will only set you back 1 million (in Lego pieces). 

At the Grand Prix Formula 1 event in Monza, Italy, Lego unveiled a functioning sports car that looks as close to the original supercar from Bugatti as is possible when using more than 1 million Lego Technic parts, more than 2,300 Lego motors, and 4,000 gear wheels in the engine. It’s just about as one-to-one as you can get with building blocks.

According to Lego, the 3,300-pound car can actually take you from point A to B; a former racing driver took it for a test drive and pushed it to 12.4 mph. Not racing-fast, but still, not bad, seeing as how it’s Lego-based. To put it in perspective, a legit Chiron can reach 60 mph in only 2.5 seconds and has a max speed of 260 mph.

The test drive with Andy Wallace took place at the Ehra-Lessien facility in Germany, where the real Chiron was first tested.

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The Lego Bugatti took more than 13,000 work-hours to develop and build, and thanks to Lego’s tireless efforts, a driver and passenger can comfortably sit inside the vehicle. There’s even a working brake pedal and speedometer that shows how fast it’s going. The car’s powered by two batteries, an 80-volt for the motor and a 12-volt for the steering and electronics inside the car, so there’s no revving the engine or shifting gears here — but, hey, the lights work.

The life-sized car was built only a few months after Lego showed off its Bugatti Chiron building set earlier this summer. But that tiny, $350 replica didn’t generate the 5.3 horsepower of its life-sized big brother — impressive, as long as you don’t compare it to the real Bugatti’s 1,500 horsepower.

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It is time to teach colonial history in British schools

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If you grew up in Britain, like me, you probably would not be able to recall being taught anything substantial about British colonial history in school.

The British curriculum dedicates plenty of attention to the violence of others – in Nazi Germany or during the American Civil War – and goes into great detail on a few events in medieval and pre-Victorian English history, like the Plague, the Great Fire of London, and the reign of Henry VIII. But a British school would not teach you anything about the brutality of British colonialism.

We were told nothing of the concentration camps the British army ran during the Boer War, the Bengal famine of 1943 or the massacres of Kenyans in the 1950s.

In school, I heard nothing of the many crimes the British perpetrated against my Iraqi ancestors. No textbook ever mentioned that Winston Churchill, so deeply venerated as a hero and a brilliant statesman, openly endorsed a chemical attack on Iraqi civilians when they demanded independence from Britain.

The British curriculum did not teach me that Britain invited Iraqi leaders for negotiations, only to kidnap and imprison them, that it sent planes to bomb civilians when they refused to pay taxes or that it burned and destroyed villages and towns to quash revolts.

Since I left school thirteen years ago, the situation has hardly changed. When, in 2010, the British government decided to overhaul the curriculum, then-education secretary, Michael Gove, decided to invite an apologist of empire, historian Niall Ferguson, to help. As a result, British textbooks still whitewash the British Empire and fail to address the foundations of white supremacy on which colonialism was built and the lasting impact of imperial policies on colonised peoples.

It was only through the stories of my grandfather – who recounted watching from his window the British march through Baghdad – that I learned there was more to the British Empire than they were teaching us at school.  

The uncomfortable feeling of not knowing led me to research extensively the shared history of Britain and Iraq, which inspired me to write a novel set during the colonisation of Mesopotamia.

For me, there’s something empowering about finally being able to level the playing field when it comes to one-sided narratives about the British Empire by telling the story of the colonised, rather than the coloniser.

Yet, the dominant whitewashed narrative of British colonial history seems to be deeply ingrained in the British psyche. Today 49 percent of Britons still think that the British Empire was a force for good that improved the lives of colonised nations and only 15 percent think it left them worse off, according to a survey by market research company YouGov.

There also seems to be a persistent nostalgia for that colonial past. The truth is that in today’s Britain, colonialism sells.

Brits still rush to buy products that play on their romantic notion of colonialism, whether cushions from UK retailer Dunelm Mill’s Colonial Chic line or an  Old Colonial burger from chain restaurant Gourmet Burger Kitchen.

They still enjoy watching TV shows about the lives and romances of rich white people in the colonial era, such as Downton Abbey and Indian Summers, which make no mention of how the wealth displayed on the screen was acquired.

They still go to cinemas to see Victoria and Abdul portray Queen Victoria as an exceptional open-minded monarch and a gracious friend of an Indian servant, as if she wasn’t profiting from the subjugation and oppression of Indians; or watch The Queen of the Desert tell the story of British diplomat and orientalist Gertrude Bell, conveniently leaving out the part about her enabling British colonialism in the Middle East and drawing the arbitrary borders of the Iraqi state.

The commodification of colonialism has even made it to institutions of higher education. In 2015, the Oxford Union decided it was a good idea to serve a drink called “colonial comeback” during a debate on colonial legacy and reparations.

In fact, Oxford University, an institution that has educated half of Britain’s political elite (its rival, Cambridge, educating the other half), has witnessed a pushback against its own colonial past. 

Students have called for the decolonisation of the Oxford curriculum, which, they say, is Eurocentric and excludes contributions by women and people of colour. 

They have also brought the Rhodes Must Fall campaign to campus, calling for the removal of a statue of Cecil Rhodes, a British colonial official who is seen by many as the architect of apartheid in South Africa. Their struggle was suppressed by wealthy donors who threatened to cut funding to the institution.

There is still widespread support for revisionism and white-washing of history in conservative institutions like Oxford and beyond. It is unsurprising that it was an Oxford scholar who last year penned an op-ed in The Times defending Britain’s colonial legacy, telling Brits: “Don’t feel guilty about our colonial history”.  

This attitude has been adopted by much of the British political elite as well. When asked in 2013 to apologise for the 1919 Amritsar Massacre, in which British troops shot dead hundreds of Indians, then-British Prime Minister David Cameron said: “I don’t think the right thing is to reach back into history and to seek out things that we should apologise for.” 

The problem with Cameron’s statement is that colonialism cannot be just relegated to history, forgiven and forgotten. 

Its legacy continues to disadvantage former colonies, where artificial borders, the unequal distribution of resources, or their exhaustion have led to conflict, impoverishment and underdevelopment.

Its logic continues to inform political and foreign policy in Britain and elsewhere to this day. It was colonialist thinking that led PM Tony Blair in 2003 to drag the country into another occupation of Iraq, shattering its economy and security and killing hundreds of thousands of Iraqis. 

We need a curriculum based on an honest, contextualised reading of British history which teaches about the brutality of colonialism. It should educate children about the economic, political and social advantages they enjoy today as a result of the colonial extraction and plunder their country engaged in during the colonial era. 

We will not lose anything by acknowledging the crimes of our past. The only way to avoid repeating our mistakes is by learning from them.

As Indian politician and author Dr Shashi Tharoor has highlighted, it’s “a bit of an embarrassment that you can get a History A Level in this country without knowing anything about colonial history.”

It’s time to change that. 

Ruqaya Izzidien’s novel The Watermelon Boys, set during and after the British conquest of Baghdad, is released on 30 August by Hoopoe Fiction.

The views expressed in this article are the author’s own and do not necessarily reflect Al Jazeera’s editorial stance. 

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Europa League – Ufa v Rangers

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Europa League – Ufa need two second-half goals against 10-man Rangers – Live – BBC Sport


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Summary

  1. Ejaria curls in away goal, but Sysuev levels for hosts
  2. Morelos sent off after two bookings
  3. Ufa need to score two more to reach group stage
  4. Gerrard’s unbeaten side lead 1-0 from first leg
  5. Celtic v Suduva (1-1) at 20:00
  6. Get involved #bbcsportscot


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Astronomers explore ‘monster galaxy’ forming stars 1,000 times faster than Milky Way

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Astronomers explore ‘monster galaxy’ forming stars 1,000 times faster than Milky Way

Astronomers have obtained the most detailed view to date of a “monster galaxy” that forms stars at a pace 1,000 times higher than the Milky Way.

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Astronomers say they have captured the most detailed view of a “monster galaxy” generating stars at a pace 1,000 times faster than the Milky Way.

The galaxies, also known as starburst galaxies, are believed to be ancestors of today’s elliptical galaxies, and could help astronomers understand how they formed.

Researchers with the National Astronomical Observatory of Japan found the galaxy called COSMOS-AzTEC-1, which sits 12.4 billion light years away, contains unstable molecular clouds generating stars more rapidly.

“We found that there are two distinct large clouds several thousand light-years away from the center,” said lead author Ken-ichi Tadaki, a postdoctoral researcher at the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science and the National Astronomical Observatory of Japan. “In most distant starburst galaxies, stars are actively formed in the center. So it is surprising to find off-center clouds.”

The team used the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array to put together a map showing how the gas in the galaxy moves.

Researchers estimate the gas from the galaxy will be consumed in 100 million years, 10 times faster than other star-forming galaxies. 

The study was published in the journal Nature.

Follow Brett Molina on Twitter: @brettmolina23.

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Pixel and iPhone had a baby, and it’s called the HTC U12 Life

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Copying a smartphone from a different manufacturer is so last year. The latest trend, it appears, is copying two different smartphones and rolling that design into one. 

Ahead of the IFA trade show in Berlin this week, HTC launched the U12 Life, a mid-range phone that looks like a cross between the Apple iPhone X and Google Pixel 2. 

I mean, just look at it. The vertically oriented dual camera with the flash in the middle is a dead ringer for the one the iPhone X, while the circular fingerprint sensor combined with a two-tone back is a distinctive Pixel feature. 

OK, it's got stripes. That's new.

OK, it’s got stripes. That’s new.

If you disregard the similarities to other, more famous phones, the HTC U12 Life doesn’t look half bad. On the front, though, it’s just a generic Android phone, with pretty big bezels (for today’s standards) on both top and bottom.

Booooring.

Booooring.

In terms of specs, the HTC U12 is a 6-inch phone with a FHD+ (2,160×1,080 pixels) resolution, a Qualcomm Snapdragon 636 processor, 4GB of RAM, 64GB of storage and a 3,600 mAh battery. The dual-camera on the back is a 13/6-megapixel combo that can do bokeh shots, and on the front you’ll find a 13-megapixel selfie camera. It also has a 3.5mm headphone jack, which is interesting as HTC’s U12+ flagship doesn’t have one. Software-wise, the HTC U12 Life will come with Android 8.1 and HTC’s Sense UI. 

The HTC U12 Life will be available in twilight purple and moonlight blue. It’ll cost 299 pounds ($389) when it hits Europe in September. 

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