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Canada cruise past Australia into semi-finals of Women's Rugby World Cup
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Vienna wins on home turf as it hosts first tram driver world cup
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Who is Tyler Robinson, alleged killer of Charlie Kirk?
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London police arrest nine after clashes at 110,000-strong far-right rally
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Mbappe shines as 10-man Real Madrid defeat Real Sociedad
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Kenyan officials, athletes call for fast action on doping
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Arsenal spoil Ange return, Woltemade earns Newcastle win
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Guirassy extends streak as Dortmund cruise past 10-man Heidenheim
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Vingegaard touching Vuelta glory with stage 20 triumph as protests continue
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'World's fastest anime fan' Lyles in element at Tokyo worlds
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De Minaur's Australia trail as Germany, Argentina into Davis Cup finals
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Airstrikes, drones, tariffs: being US friend not what it used to be
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Cyclists swerve protest group in road during Vuelta stage 20
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A Tokyo full house revels in Chebet and sprinters at world athletics champs
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Holders New Zealand fight past South Africa into Women's Rugby World Cup semis
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Ex-Olympic champion Rissveds overcomes depression to win world mountain bike gold
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Kenya's Chebet wins 10,000m gold, suggests no tilt at world double
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Arsenal ruin Postecoglou's Forest debut as Zubimendi bags brace
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Shot put legend Crouser wins third successive world title
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Bezzecchi wins San Marino MotoGP sprint as Marc Marquez crashes out
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Kenya's Chebet wins 10,000m gold to set up tilt at world double
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Lyles, Thompson and Tebogo cruise through world 100m heats
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Vuelta final stage shortened amid protest fears
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Collignon stuns De Minaur as Belgium take Davis Cup lead over Australia
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Nepal returns to calm as first woman PM takes charge, visits wounded
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Olympic champion Alfred eases through 100m heats at Tokyo worlds
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Barca's Flick blasts Spain over Yamal injury issue
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Rampant Springboks inflict record 43-10 defeat to humble All Blacks
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Italy's Bezzecchi claims San Marino MotoGP pole as Marquez brothers denied
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Rampant South Africa inflict record 43-10 defeat on All Blacks
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Collignon stuns De Minaur as Belgium take 2-0 Davis Cup lead over Australia
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Mourning Nepalis hope protest deaths will bring change
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Carreras boots Argentina to nervy 28-26 win over Australia
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Nepal returns to calm as first woman PM takes charge
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How mowing less lets flowers bloom along Austria's 'Green Belt'
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Too hot to study, say Italian teachers as school (finally) resumes
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Alvarez, Crawford both scale 167.5 pounds for blockbuster bout
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Tokyo fans savour athletics worlds four years after Olympic lockout
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Akram tells Pakistan, India to forget noise and 'enjoy' Asia Cup clash
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Kicillof, the Argentine governor on a mission to stop Milei
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Something to get your teeth into: 'Jaws' exhibit marks 50 years
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Germany, France, Argentina, Austria on brink of Davis Cup finals
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War with Russia weighs heavily on Ukrainian medal hope Doroshchuk
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Suspect in Charlie Kirk killing caught, widow vows to carry on fight
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Dunfee and Perez claim opening world golds in Tokyo
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Ben Griffin leads PGA Procore Championship in Ryder Cup tune-up
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'We're more than our pain': Miss Palestine to compete on global stage
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Ingebrigtsen seeks elusive 1500m world gold after injury-plagued season
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Thailand's Chanettee leads by two at LPGA Queen City event

Trump's budget hacksaw leaves public broadcasting on precipice
Hundreds of television and radio stations across the United States risk seeing their resources evaporate, after President Donald Trump prevailed Friday in scrapping federal funding for public broadcasting.
The cuts follow Trump's accusations of ideological bias and will deal a bitter blow to information dissemination nationwide, including rural areas with limited news resources.
At the Republican president's urging, lawmakers along party lines approved the clawback of $1.1 billion in funding already allocated by Congress over the next two years to the Corporation for Public Broadcasting.
Created in 1967 by president Lyndon Johnson, the non-profit CPB finances a minority share of the budgets of national radio and television mainstays NPR and PBS.
But the unprecedented rescission will also critically impact some 1,500 local radio and TV stations, from the East Coast to Alaska, that air part of the public broadcasters' content.
"Without federal funding, many local public radio and television stations will be forced to shut down," warned CPB president Patricia Harrison.
- Connection -
Stations have been sounding the alarm for months. Prairie Public Broadcasting, which has served North Dakota for 60 years, estimates it could lose 26 percent of its budget between combined cuts in state and CPB funding.
For Vermont Public, a broadcaster in the US Northeast, $4 million in funding is at stake.
"We're going to be forced to make some really difficult decisions about what local programming stays and what local programming we have to cut," said Ryan Howlett, who heads the financial arm of South Dakota Public Broadcasting, which oversees a dozen local radio stations and as many local TV stations.
In this rural and conservative state, "you're going to lose a connection point that binds us together," he told AFP.
Trump has made very public his hostility to the media, which he often brands "fake news" and the "enemy of the people," a driving force behind his political rhetoric.
In early May, Trump issued an executive order requiring an end to the subsidization of NPR and PBS, saying "neither entity presents a fair, accurate, or unbiased portrayal of current events to taxpaying citizens."
"These are partisan, leftwing outlets that are funded by the taxpayers, and this administration does not believe it's a good use of the taxpayers' time and money," White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt said Thursday.
Howlett emphasized that there is little such criticism in local communities in South Dakota. "We're part of people's everyday lives," he said.
- Turning point -
The elimination of CPB funding, advocated by the "Project 2025" blueprint of the conservative Heritage Foundation think tank, marks a turning point. Other attempts in the past had met with opposition from lawmakers, including Republicans in rural areas.
Dan Kennedy, a journalism professor at Northeastern University in Boston, stressed it is in those very areas where the funding cuts are likely to have "a devastating effect."
For remote communities, "these stations are an absolute lifeline," he said. "This is where people go to find out a tornado is coming," or about other emergency news.
Such arguments were rejected by Heritage Foundation fellow Mike Gonzalez, who wrote the chapter on public broadcasting in the Project 2025 blueprint.
For him, "state and local governments can devise and set up systems that take care of the problem, on a much cheaper basis than the entire public broadcasting apparatus, and without the attendant ills that accompany the present system."
The end of the federal funding is undoubtedly a blow to local news in the United States.
Due to declining readership and the consolidation of titles under larger corporations, more than a third of the nation's newspapers have shuttered since 2005, a loss of 3,300 titles, according to a report from the Medill School at Northwestern University.
According to a recent map drawn by analysis firm Muck Rack and the Rebuild Local News coalition, there are now only 8.2 journalists per 100,000 Americans, down from 40 in the early 2000s.
P.Staeheli--VB