Salmonella linked to home delivery meals sickens people in 10 statesNew Foto - Salmonella linked to home delivery meals sickens people in 10 states

ASalmonellaoutbreak linked to certain home delivery meals from Metabolic Meals has sickened more than a dozen people across 10 states, and seven had to be hospitalized, theCenters for Disease Control and Prevention saidFriday. The meals were made by and delivered by the Metabolic Meals company during the week of July 28 and included these varieties: Four cheese tortellini with pesto sauce and grilled chicken — Lot Code: 25199; Best By: 08/07/2025.Low carb chicken teriyaki and vegetables — Lot Code: 25202; Best By: 08/05/2025.Black garlic and ranch chicken tenders with roasted vegetables — Lot Code: 25205; Best By: 08/08/2025.Sliced top sirloin with roasted peanut sauce and summer vegetables — Lot Code: 25203; Best By: 08/06/2025.Additional meal lot codes: 25199, 25202, 25203, 25204, 25205. People sickened lived in California, Missouri, Georgia, Minnesota, Texas, Arkansas, Illinois, Rhode Island, Wisconsin and Washington state, the CDC said. Metabolic Meals is a home delivery meal subscription service focused on macro-friendly meals,accordingto their website. CBS News has reached out to Metabolic Meals for comment. The CDC advised people to check their refrigerator or freezer for any affected products and do not eat them; throw them away or contact the company. Metabolic Meals is working with investigators and has "reached out to customers directly who purchased the meal types listed above to inform them of the outbreak," the CDC said in their statement. Public health officials said about 16 people reported symptoms and seven were hospitalized, but officials cautioned the number of people affected might be higher, as it usually takes3 to 4 weeksto determine if a sick person is part of an outbreak. People infected with the Salmonella bacteria can experience symptoms including nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, bloody diarrhea, abdominal cramping and fever. Rarely, Salmonella can result in more serious ailments, including arterial infections, endocarditis, arthritis, muscle pain, eye irritation and urinary tract symptoms. U.S. deploying 10 fighter jets to Puerto Rico in drug cartel crackdown Chicago-area Navy base to be used for immigration operations Reporter's Notebook: Can a manufacturing renaissance deliver for workers?

Salmonella linked to home delivery meals sickens people in 10 states

Salmonella linked to home delivery meals sickens people in 10 states ASalmonellaoutbreak linked to certain home delivery meals from Metaboli...
Man dies in shark attack at Sydney beach in AustraliaNew Foto - Man dies in shark attack at Sydney beach in Australia

LONDON -- A man died Saturday on a beach in Sydney "after being bitten by what is believed to have been a large shark," police said. First responders were deployed to Long Reef Beach on the Northern Beaches of Sydney in Australia's New South Wales state around 10 a.m. local time after receiving reports of a man suffering critical injuries. The unidentified man "was retrieved from the surf and brought to the shore; however, died at the scene," according to the New South Wales Police Force. "Two sections of a surfboard have been recovered and taken for expert examination," police said in a statement. "The identity of the man is to be confirmed." Authorities have closed the beach and are bringing in experts "to determine the species of the shark involved," according to police. Beaches between Manly and Narrabeen were also shuttered "pending further advice," police said.

Man dies in shark attack at Sydney beach in Australia

Man dies in shark attack at Sydney beach in Australia LONDON -- A man died Saturday on a beach in Sydney "after being bitten by what is...
Maryland leaders tell Trump they don't need the National Guard to curb gun violenceNew Foto - Maryland leaders tell Trump they don't need the National Guard to curb gun violence

BALTIMORE (AP) — In a pointed show of solidarity against PresidentDonald Trump, state and local leaders walked through one of Baltimore's most historically underserved neighborhoods Friday evening amid ongoing efforts to curb gun violence. Those efforts are working, Gov. Wes Moore said. Homicides in Baltimore have reachedhistoric lowswith sustained declinesstarting in 2023. He said the last thing Baltimore needs is theNational Guard presenceTrump has threatened. "We do not need occupiers," Moore said to a crowd of law enforcement officers, anti-violence advocates, local clergy and other community leaders who gathered in northwest Baltimore's Park Heights neighborhood. Moore wrote a letter to the president last month inviting him to visit Baltimore and see its recent success firsthand. Officials attribute the progress to their crime-fighting strategies, which include social services meant to address theroot causes of violence. In an escalating feud over public safety, Trump responded to the invitation by calling Baltimore "a horrible, horrible deathbed" and insulting Maryland leaders. "I'm not walking in Baltimore right now," he said. His refusal prompted state and local leaders to present a strongly united front. Moore, a U.S. Army veteran, criticized Trump for using National Guard members to send a political message in a "purely theatrical" show of force. Baltimore Mayor Brandon Scott joined the governor Friday in his childhood home of Park Heights. The sprawling majority-Black community in northwest Baltimore has suffered from decades of disinvestment, but Scott has made a point of investing in its future. Park Heights once boasted a thriving economy and picturesque tree-lined streets surrounding the historic Pimlico Race Course. But white flight and other factors led to increased rates of poverty, violence and economic decline. As the group started walking, they chanted: "We all we got, we all we need." They passed a dollar store and other rundown businesses. They turned down a residential street where people waved from the porches of brick rowhomes. Kevin Myers, a longtime Park Heights resident, was climbing into his truck when the group passed. He said Baltimore leaders are making him proud. "Let Trump know you can handle Baltimore," he yelled to the mayor, who smiled widely in response. Another man briefly heckled the group, saying the event was just a media stunt, not proof that elected officials are truly committed to helping the community. Trump has previously targeted Baltimore Scott has repeatedly accused Trump of using racist rhetoric and targeting Black-led cities with his promises to deploy National Guard troops. In remarks after the walk, he urged Baltimore residents to push back against that rhetoric. "Do not shrink. Stand up in the moment," he said. "So a hundred years from now … they will know that you stood up to fascism, that you stood up to racism, that you stood up to folks who were trying to destroy your democracy." Earlier this week, the presidentrenewed his threatsto send National Guard troops to Baltimore, though he appeared more focused on Chicago. He has already sent troops into Los Angeles and Washington, where he has also federalized the police force. He has said he plans similar moves in other Democrat-run cities even as a federal judge on Tuesday deemed the California deployment illegal. This isn't the first time Trump has taken aim at Baltimore. He previously called the city a "disgusting, rat and rodent infested mess." Those comments came amid the president's attacks on DemocraticRep. Elijah Cummings, whose district included Baltimore until his death in 2019. In his letter to the president, Maryland's governor noted recent cuts to federal funding for violence intervention programs. He asked Trump to "be part of the solution, not the problem." Homicides and shootings have fallen in Baltimore Homicides and shootings in Baltimore have plummeted over the past two years. The city recorded 201 homicides in 2024, the lowest annual total in over a decade and a 23% drop from the previous year. The downward trend has continued throughout 2025, including the lowest number of homicides on record for the month of August. It is a relief for Baltimore, where violence surged following the 2015 in-custody death of Freddie Gray and subsequent protests against police brutality. While Baltimore's numbers are especially dramatic, other cities are also seeing post-pandemic declines in violence. Baltimore officials say that is because they are taking a holistic approach to public safety, instead of relying solely on law enforcement. The city is investing in historically neglected communities to help address the myriad factors that perpetuate cycles of gun violence: hopelessness, joblessness, poverty, mental health, substance abuse, housing instability, poor conflict resolution and more.

Maryland leaders tell Trump they don't need the National Guard to curb gun violence

Maryland leaders tell Trump they don't need the National Guard to curb gun violence BALTIMORE (AP) — In a pointed show of solidarity aga...
Teen known as 'God's influencer' to become the first millennial saintNew Foto - Teen known as 'God's influencer' to become the first millennial saint

ASSISI,Italy — To his mom, he was "a normal kid," but on Sunday,Carlo Acutiswill become the first millennial saint at a solemn canonization Mass held byPope Leo XIVin St. Peter's Square outside the Vatican. Informally known as the "God's influencer" Carlo was just 15 when he died of acute promyelocytic leukemia in Milan in 2006 and has two miracles attributed to him by the Catholic Church. Being made a saint means the church believes a person lived a holy life and is now in heaven with God. But in an interview with NBC News, his mother, Antonia Salzano, 58, said that, in many ways, her son was just like any other teenager who liked playing video games, hanging out with his friends and playing soccer. "He was a normal kid, he was a normal person, but he opened the door of his heart to God," she said earlier this year. Carlo was born in London where his father, Andrea Acutis, 61, was working as a merchant banker, but the family moved back to Milan when he was young. Salzano said that from an early age, Carlo "was always generous with his things." "If I wanted to buy, for example, two pairs of shoes, he used to say, 'No, one is sufficient because there are people who are starving who don't have anything to eat. So we don't have to waste money. Let's help other people.'" Carlo was put on the path toward sainthood after thelate Pope Francisapproved a miracle attributed to him in 2020, declaring him "blessed" and crediting him with healing Matheus Vianna, a 7-year-old boy from Brazil who recovered from a rare pancreatic disorder after coming into contact with one of Carlo's T-shirts. That path was further paved last year whenCarlo was attributed with a second miracle,in which he was credited with the complete healing of Costa Rican student Valeria Valverde from major head trauma sustained in a bicycle accident, after her mother prayed at his tomb. But from an early age, Salzano said, he taught himself how to program computers and was asking her to buy books trained engineers might use. "He had a special skill, probably something unbelievable. I couldn't understand how it would be so. But he used what he had in the heart, the love of God, to maximize for spreading the faith," she added. Using the family's small, old computer, Carlo taught himself how to program and built a website cataloging more than 100 Eucharistic miracles around the world that had been recognized by the church over many centuries. But while programming was his passion, Salzano said, she thought he would likely have become a priest as he had asked her about pursuing a career in the church. After receiving his First Communion at the age of 7, he attended daily Mass regularly and taught catechism in a local parish. "He wanted to help people to discover their faith, to discover God, the love of God. And all his life was spent for this. Even if he lived a normal life, like young boys of his age," she added. At just 15 years old, in October 2006, he fell ill and within 10 days died of acute promyelocytic leukemia. While his suffering caused her a lot of pain, Salzano said, "if we leave suffering, offering to God, we can be in a certain way a little savior, like Jesus, we can help other people with our prayers." While she misses her son, she added that she had faith and she knew "that death is to say goodbye, not the end of everything. But death, as Carlo used to say, is the start of the true life." In 2018, Carlo was named "venerable" after the church recognized his virtuous life, and his body was taken to a shrine in the Santuario della Spogliazione in the small town ofAssisi in central Italy. He asked for that to be his final resting place because of his devotion to themedieval saint, St. Francis, whose hometown was Assisi. Wearing a track top, jeans and sneakers, he lies there entombed with a wax mold of his likeness placed over his body. Today it is a popular devotional site, attracting thousands of worshippers every day, Monsignor Anthony Figueiredo said in an interview earlier this year. "This is a saint in front of our eyes, and he's a different kind of saint, you can see with jeans and sneakers and a hoodie exactly as he dressed," he said, adding that Carlo had been inspired by by Apple founder Steve Jobs, who had said that at the end of each day, he had wanted to know he had "done something wonderful for someone else." "That really sums up Carlo," Figueiredo said, adding that the teenager really strove to do something differently. "One of Carlo's sayings, 'All of us are born originals, but so many of us end up as photocopies.' We just want to be like the crowd and be like others. And Carlo said, 'you need to be original.'" Explaining Carlo's popularity, he recounted an interaction with a Mexican student who told him, "I cannot wear the sack cloth of Francis of Assisi. I cannot do the penances of Claire of Assisi, but I do have a pair of jeans, and I do wear trainers." Sunday's ceremony in front of the Vatican's St. Peter Basilica, in conjunction with the celebration of the Holy Year's jubilee for teens, was originally set for April but was postponed after the death of Francis, who called the internet a "gift from God" and encouraged the Vatican to use technology. It will be the first time Leo, elected in May to replace Francis, has presided over such an event. It is impossible to quantify exactly how many saints there are. During the church's first 1,000 years, they were proclaimed by popular demand, but some estimateshave the number exceeding 10,000. Other saints who died at a young age include Therese of Lisieux, who was known for promoting a "Little Way" of charity and died at 24 in 1897, and Aloysius Gonzaga, who died at 23 in 1591 after caring for victims of an epidemic in Rome. As for Carlo, his mother said that she thought her son was "a sign of hope" and that it was "important to remind young people that they are unique. "Like Carlo did, he could become holy in this world," Salzano said. "You too can do the same. You too can overcome this and can do important things as well."

Teen known as 'God's influencer' to become the first millennial saint

Teen known as 'God's influencer' to become the first millennial saint ASSISI,Italy — To his mom, he was "a normal kid,...
Huge Powerball jackpots attract 'everyone,' but there's a catchNew Foto - Huge Powerball jackpots attract 'everyone,' but there's a catch

Americans from all backgrounds put up hard-earned money for achance to win the Powerball– especially when jackpots hit eye-popping figures – but gambling most negatively impacts low-income households, experts told USA TODAY. "There's no group that really doesn't play the lottery, but they play at different rates," said David Just, a Cornell University economics professor. Across socio-economic lines, both the rich and the poor participate inthe lotterybut lower-income groups play at higher rates than wealthier individuals – and they spend higher percentages of their income on lottery games, research shows. Federal sales data indicates the lottery is most popular in the Northeast, including in Massachusetts and Rhode Island. The lottery also sees higher rates of play during times of economic turmoil, such as the COVID-19 pandemic, fitting other known gambling trends that correlate financial blows to increased risk taking. But that all changes, however, as the jackpot grows and the lottery turns into a social event. Such is the case with the current$1.8 billion jackpot, the second-largest in U.S. history. As the grand prize has climbed, so too has the number of participants forking over $2 per ticket for a chance to win the life-altering jackpot. For the Sept. 3 drawing, there were 162 million Powerball tickets sold nationwide, a 189% increase in sales compared to the previous week's drawing, according to the Multi-State Lottery Association. "At the billion-dollar mark, the lottery starts to bring everyone in – the convenience store worker, the teacher, the doctor, the lawyer, the internet billionaire," said Victor Matheson, an economics professor at College of the Holy Cross who has studied the lottery and other forms of gambling for decades. More:Want to win that huge Powerball jackpot? Here's updates on everything to know. In 2023, Americans spent over $103 million on the lottery nationwide, including the Powerball, according to statistics from the U.S. Census Bureau. The states in which people spent the most money on the lottery have the largest populations ‒ New York, California, Texas, Florida. But when lottery sales are calculated per capita, Massachusetts leads the pack, with the average adult spending nearly $900 a year on lottery games. "The average spendings on the lottery is astounding, especially in Massachusetts," said Just. "It sort of makes your jaw drop when you first see it." Experts said more research needs to be done to determine exactly why northeastern states see such high rates of lottery engagement, but possible factors include higher levels of disposable income and more urban settings that make it easier to purchase lottery games in person, Matheson said. Just and Matheson both pointed to the statistic that the average adult spends about $400 a year on lottery games. While the spending is fairly even across socio-economic lines, it has a disproportionate impact on low-income families that could otherwise use those funds for necessities or to build savings. "That's pretty significant when you're talking about households in the bottom fifth of incomes, making about $40,000 per year," Matheson said. State lotteries have also faced fierce criticism for selling more to low-income communities and transferring wealth out of those areas to more affluent school districts through scholarships and other lottery-funded programs. A2022 study by the Howard Center for Investigative Journalismfound that stores selling lottery tickets are disproportionately clustered in lower-income communities, and that people who patronize those retailers live in the same areas. State-sanctioned reports and studies have found that scratch-offs are the highest-earning lottery games, and a small segment of habitual players account for most of the spending. These players were disproportionately Black, Hispanic, lower-income and non-high school graduates, the Howard Center found in its analysis of other reports and statewide studies. Matheson referenced these findings and said scratch-offs are "disproportionally purchased by the poor." But, he added, as prizes reach into the multi-million and billion dollar range, participation from high-income households begins to climb. Research suggests that habitual lottery players – especially those with low incomes – see the gamble as an investment rather than a form of entertainment. "It's something that provides hope for those who are desperate," Just said. "It may be a false hope, but it's what they have." This view can be exacerbated by hard times. Just said research has found correlations between economic downturns and increased participation in the lottery. He pointed to the height of the pandemic, when multiple states saw major increases in the amount of money people were spending on the lottery. South Carolina, for example,saw a $300 million or almost 19% surge in lottery saleswhen compared with 2019. It depends. Will it be a lighthearted purchase so you can be a part of a national event, or is it a desperate attempt to recoup lost money? Will buying a lottery ticket eat up a noticeable portion of your income? Do you have an emergency fund? Experts say these questions are essential in determining whether you have a healthy view of the lottery. The lottery, including the Powerball, should be seen as an entertainment product – not an investment, experts say. That's because your estimated chances of winning the jackpot are about 1 in 292 million. It can alsoworsen your mental health, especially if you're spending money you can't afford to lose. "$2 is a low price to pay to dream about being a billionaire – that's true," said Matheson. "But as an investment, it's terrible." If you or someone you know is struggling with gambling, call or text 1-800-GAMBLER, operated by theNational Council on Problem Gambling. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Huge Powerball jackpots attract 'everyone.' Is it worth the risk?

Huge Powerball jackpots attract 'everyone,' but there's a catch

Huge Powerball jackpots attract 'everyone,' but there's a catch Americans from all backgrounds put up hard-earned money for acha...

 

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