Wednesday, June 28, 2017

Yes he can: Obama returns to Indonesia for family vacation

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Yes he can: Obama returns to Indonesia for family vacation

Yes he can: Obama returns to Indonesia for family vacationBy Jessica Damiana JAKARTA (Reuters) - From white water rafting in Bali to visiting temples on Java, former U.S. President Barack Obama's private family holiday is being closely tracked in Indonesia where he spent four years as a child. Obama was six when he moved to Jakarta after his American mother, Ann Dunham, married an Indonesian man following the end of her marriage to Obama's Kenyan father. "I feel proud that my friend became a president," said Sonni Gondokusumo, 56, a former classmate of Obama at the Menteng 01 state elementary school in Jakarta.


Wildfires in Arizona, California, Utah force hundreds from their homes

Wildfires in Arizona, California, Utah force hundreds from their homesFirefighters in three western states are facing major summer wildfires, one in an area where 19 firefighters were killed four years ago.


Thank Putin, Not Trump, For NATO’s New Defense Spending Boost

Thank Putin, Not Trump, For NATO’s New Defense Spending BoostNATO allies plan to increase defense spending this year, but Trump can’t take full credit.


Community buy Texas man car after finding him walking 3 miles to and from work in 32 degree heat

Community buy Texas man car after finding him walking 3 miles to and from work in 32 degree heatA man who was forced to walk miles to work in sweltering heat, has been bought a car by members of his local community. Justin Korva regularly braved temperatures of 90 degrees Fahrenheit (32 Celsius) to get to his job at Taco Casa in Rockwell, Texas. The 20-year-old was picked up on his three-mile trek one morning by Andy Mitchell, who posted a picture of pair on Facebook next to a message explaining his journey.


Pope tells new cardinals: be humble, help poor, fight injustice

Pope tells new cardinals: be humble, help poor, fight injusticeBy Philip Pullella VATICAN CITY (Reuters) - Pope Francis elevated five senior clerics from outside Italy and the Vatican to the top rank of cardinal on Wednesday, urging them to be humble and not forget refugees and victims of war, terrorism and injustice. Appointing new cardinals is one of the most significant powers of the papacy, allowing a pontiff to put his stamp on the future of the 1.2 billion-member Church. Cardinals are the pope's closest advisers in the Vatican and around the world and those under 80 years old are known as "cardinal-electors" because they can choose his successor.


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