Sierra Ferrell’s unconventional journey to new album “Trail of Flowers”


Sierra Ferrell’s unconventional journey to new album “Trail of Flowers” – CBS News

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Rolling Stone has called 35-year-old singer-songwriter Sierra Ferrell one of “country and roots music’s most fascinating and fastest-rising artists.” She’s touring alongside the Avett Brothers and Zach Bryan this summer. But Ferrell’s road to this moment was unconventional. As Anthony Mason shows, the only thing more amazing than her voice is her story.

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Putin speaks of ‘Ukrainian trail’ in attack near Moscow


Russian President Vladimir Putin has spoken of alleged Ukrainian involvement in the Moscow concert hall attack on Friday evening that killed more than 100 people.

Referring to four of the eleven men arrested in connection with the concert hall attack, Putin said in an address to the nation broadcast on Russian state television on Saturday afternoon that there was a clear “Ukrainian trail.”

“They tried to hide and moved towards Ukraine, where a window had been prepared for them to cross the border,” Putin said.

Russia’s FSB domestic intelligence service had previously reported arrests in the southern Bryansk region, which borders on Ukraine.

More than two years into its defence against a full-scale Russian invasion, Ukraine emphatically rejected rumours of its involvement in the attack on the outskirts of Moscow.

The Islamic State terrorist militia also issued a message claiming responsibility for the attack, which some experts consider to be genuine.

Russian propagandists were quick to claim that Ukraine was behind the bloodshed, but did not provide any proof of this.

According to the authorities, more than 100 people were killed in the assault with small arms and explosives on Friday evening at the Crocus City Hall concert and event venue.

Russian President Vladimir Putin speaks during his address, the day after a terror attack on the Crocus City Hall in Krasnogorsk. -/Kremlin/dpa

Russian President Vladimir Putin speaks during his address, the day after a terror attack on the Crocus City Hall in Krasnogorsk. -/Kremlin/dpa



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Hiker found dead on remote Phoenix trail was probably a victim of the heat, authorities say


An Oregon woman who went missing on a hike in north Phoenix has been found dead and it appears to be heat-related, according to authorities.

Phoenix Fire Department officials said Jessica Christine Lindstrom, 34, went hiking around 8:30 a.m. Friday and was declared missing about nine hours later by Phoenix police.

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Jessica Christin Lindstrom in undated family photo.

Phoenix Police Department


Fire Department Capt. Scott Douglas said drones and technical rescue teams were used during a five-hour search before Lindstrom’s body was found on a remote trail on the north side of the Deem Hills Recreation Area.

Douglas said it will be up to the Maricopa County Office of the Medical Examiner to determine a cause of death, but preliminary information suggests Lindstrom was overcome by the heat while hiking.

“Unfortunately, Ms. Lindstrom was in town from Oregon, where it doesn’t get this hot,” Douglas said.

Authorities said Lindstrom, who formerly lived in the Phoenix suburb of Peoria, was a registered nurse in Oregon and was visiting family.

CBS Phoenix affiliate KPHO-TV spoke with Lindstrom’s father, who described her as energetic, strong-willed, and a great mom to her four little boys. When she was living in Arizona, he said, she hiked the same trails often with her husband.

Maricopa County, the state’s most populous, reported Wednesday that 39 heat-associated deaths have been confirmed this year as of July 29 with another 312 deaths under investigation.

At the same time last year, there were 42 confirmed heat-related deaths in the county with another 282 under investigation.

Maricopa County, which includes Phoenix, reported 425 heat-associated deaths in all of 2022, more than half of them in July.

The National Weather Service said July was the hottest month in Phoenix on record, with an average temperature of 102.7 Fahrenheit. That topped the previous record of 99.1 degrees set in August 2020.

Phoenix and its suburbs sweltered more and longer than most cities during the recent heat spell, with several records including 31 consecutive days over 110 degrees. The previous record was 18 straight, set in 1974.

The National Weather Service said metro Phoenix was under an excessive heat warning through Monday night, with near-record high temperatures expected to reach between 110 and 114 Sunday and Monday.

Saturday’s high of 116 broke the previous record of 115, which was set on that date in 2019.



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Body found off popular Maryland trail believed to be missing woman Rachel Morin; police investigating death as homicide


Body found off Harford County trail believed to be woman reported missing night before


Body found off Harford County trail believed to be woman reported missing night before

02:07

A woman found dead off a popular hiking trail Sunday in Maryland is believed to be a 37-year-old who was reported missing by her boyfriend and police are investigating the death as a homicide, authorities said.

Rachel Morin reportedly went to the Ma & Pa Trail in Bel Air at about 6 p.m. Saturday evening, Harford County Sheriff Jeffrey Gahler said Sunday. She was reported missing by her boyfriend around 11:30 p.m. when she didn’t return home.

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Rachel Morin

Harford County Sheriff’s Office


Morin’s car was located at the trailhead and a volunteer searcher found the body at about 1 p.m. on Sunday, Gahler said.

“They set up a command center here so we figured that it was something rather grave that had happened to that poor woman,” Bel Air resident Kathy Tunney told CBS Baltimore.

The area reopened after deputies spent hours at the crime scene, but Gahler urged people walking the trail to be vigilant. He said he could not yet confirm that there is not a threat to the public.

“We understand this homicide causes a lot of concern. It causes a lot of concern for us,” Gahler said. “The trail is one of our major parks and recs assets that runs through a lot of different parts of Harford County.”

Residents of the normally quiet community told CBS Baltimore they are in shock.

“My daughter was just out running this morning to the end of the trail and back,” Tunney said. “So we enjoy it and we enjoy living next to it. I have never felt afraid.”

Gahler said there will be an increased police presence throughout the trail while deputies investigate.

“We ask anyone walking on the trail to always be aware of your surroundings,” Gahler said. “The earbuds are great, they help you exercise, but it can also prevent you from being aware of your surroundings. If possible, walk or run with a friend, buddy-up, or consider wearing a whistle or an alert device, and let your family know where you are. If you see something that doesn’t make you feel comfortable, and you feel suspicious about it, take out your phone and call 911 and let law enforcement respond.”

Update #2

At approximately 1:07 pm, a female was located deceased off of the Ma and Pa Trail in Bel Air. The identity…

Posted by Harford County Sheriff’s Office on Sunday, August 6, 2023

The trail is located near the center of Bel Air, nearly 50 miles northeast of Baltimore.

A GoFundMe pafe set up by Morin’s sister Rebekah has raised more than $20,000.

“This was not an accidentally death, and she did not go willingly and she deserves a funeral worthy of her her beauty,” Rebekah Morin wrote.





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Former President Donald Trump hit the campaign trail days after his latest indictment.


Former President Donald Trump hit the campaign trail days after his latest indictment. – CBS News

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Days after his latest federal indictment, former President Donald Trump hit the campaign trail in Alabama to continue his campaign for presidency, calling the indictments a badge of honor. Trump scored the backing of the entire Republican U.S. House delegation in this deep south state. Christina Ruffini is reporting from Washington, D.C.

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How Nikki Haley and Vivek Ramaswamy are taking different approaches to identity on the campaign trail



Among a sea of white candidates in the GOP primary, two Indian Americans are vying for the nomination — or at least a spot in the public’s memory. But when it comes to selling their racial identities to an overwhelmingly white, Christian Republican voter base, tech entrepreneur Vivek Ramaswamy and former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley have very different approaches, experts said.

Ramaswamy, 37, who hails from Ohio, has quickly become the party’s latest underdog, currently polling at No. 3. He’s beating former Vice President Mike Pence, though still trailing Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis and former President Donald Trump by large margins. 

Building much of his platform on fighting “wokeism” and “Covidism,” Ramaswamy has branded himself as pro-Trump throughout his campaign. He’s also a Hindu and has been outspoken about it. Experts say he’s employing his race and religion in ways not seen before on the GOP side.

“There’s something novel about his story,” said Pawan Dhingra, a professor of American studies at Amherst College in Massachusetts. “There are different angles of his story — one is a Hindu, one as an Indian, one is as an outsider, one is as a tech millionaire — than a standard politician.” 

Haley, 51, born Nimrata Randhawa to Sikh parents, is a much more established political figure. She started her career decades ago in South Carolina, and experts say her race has been a background actor in her life. She converted from Sikhism to Christianity and opted to go by her middle name, Nikki.

Haley’s campaign did not respond to NBC News’ request for comment.

Haley, a former U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, currently polls in fifth place and has taken more moderate positions than her contemporaries, including on critiquing Trump. 

“She has sort of this folksy, down-home appeal,” said Varun Nikore, executive director of the AAPI Victory Alliance, a progressive nonprofit group representing Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders that has not made any 2024 endorsements. 

When Haley talks about her race, it’s usually in the context of overcoming it, experts say, or as a way to dismiss racism in the United States.

Ramaswamy and Haley are polling at 6.9% and 3% respectively, according to the polling aggregator FiveThirtyEight, and political pundits say either of them securing the nomination is unlikely. Despite that, their stars are rising, and they’re racing to court a Christian voter base that looks nothing like them. 

Two distinct political eras 

Haley and Ramaswamy entered politics nearly three decades apart from one another. Tracing their rise illustrates how drastically the prominence of South Asian Americans has changed over time, experts say. 

When Haley started in local chambers of commerce in the 1990s, success for an immigrant, especially in the Republican sphere, was much rarer and more difficult, Dhingra said. Haley putting her identity on the backburner might have been necessary for her political viability, he said. 

Ramaswamy’s success comes after South Asians have spent decades establishing themselves in the tech industry, he said. 

“Vivek is inheriting a certain stature that Indians have in this current moment,” Dhingra said. “Nikki Haley entered the scene a long time ago in South Carolina. It’s not an equal cultural space in which they started off.” 

Ramaswamy touts ‘Judeo-Christian values’ as a Hindu 

Experts say Ramaswamy is a curveball for Republican voters. Someone running for president who looks like him, with his faith and his career background, is unique. The last Hindu candidate to achieve popularity in a presidential race was Tulsi Gabbard in the 2020 Democratic primary.

“I’m not sure I can recall when a South Asian from the tech community has announced a run,” Nikore said. “His brand of politics is sort of mainstream for folks coming out of Silicon Valley.”

But he’s taken some hardline stances, including stating he’d pardon Trump if elected and that he wants to raise the voting age to 25. A list of 10 “truths” on his campaign website includes aphorisms like “God is real,” “there are two genders” and “human flourishing requires fossil fuels.”

He’s also drawn attention for discussions of his Hindu faith with Christian voters on the campaign trail. At a town hall, he told the audience, “We share the same values, the same Judeo-Christian values in power.” His framing has led some to mistakenly believe he is Christian.

“Ramaswamy is very much strategically glossing over real and fundamental differences between Hinduism and Christianity, almost misrepresenting Hinduism,” said Harita Iswara, communications coordinator for the civil rights organization Hindus for Human Rights. “If he makes it further in the race … he might have to litigate further what he actually means beyond saying he has the same good ‘Judeo-Christian’ values as his competitors, in order to appeal to the Christian base. It could potentially stump him.”

But Ramaswamy’s team disagrees with those assessments. 

“Vivek talks about the importance of reviving God and family in our country more than anyone else in this race,” his senior adviser and communications director Tricia McLaughlin told NBC News. “Yes, he knows the Bible better than many self-proclaimed Christians, but that’s exactly what allows him to speak with authority about shared values. He has given speeches where he invokes a fundamental teaching from Hindu scripture, the Vedas: ‘satyam vara, dharmam chara.’ It means: speak truth, do your duty. Which happens to be the heart of Vivek’s message to our country.”

Though he hasn’t taken a public stance on Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government, which many cite as contributing to a rise in Hindu nationalism and Islamophobia both in India and the diaspora, experts said he’s silently riding that wave. Appealing to an evangelical crowd would be near impossible for a Muslim candidate in a similar position, Dhingra said. 

Ramaswamy has called himself a “nonwhite nationalist.” His team told NBC News this comment was “tongue in cheek.”

Nikore said: “He’s trying to make himself relatable and say, ‘Hey, I’m a fundamentalist Hindu just like you’re a fundamentalist evangelical, and this is how you can relate to me.’” 

Haley’s softer approach to identity

Haley doesn’t talk about her race as consistently when addressing the general public. But Dhingra says he’s heard her speak at Indian American events, where she’s been more open about her identity.

“She’s spoken about her family and her parents and what it means to grow up Sikh,” he said. “I don’t know if she has leaned in to it the same way [as Ramaswamy].”

He can also see her referring to race more as her presidential campaign heats up, he said. 

In fact, she announced her 2024 campaign with a reference to her race.

“The railroad tracks divided the town by race,” she said of Bamberg, South Carolina. “I was the proud daughter of Indian immigrants. Not Black, not white, I was different.” 

But when she has brought up her background, she has used it to perpetuate the model minority myth, push back against the racial justice movement and take hard stances on immigration, Nikore and Dhingra said. 

“We faced discrimination and hardship,” she said in her campaign announcement video. “But my parents never gave in to grievance and hate.”

She takes a similar approach to that of former Louisiana governor and 2016 Republican presidential hopeful Piyush “Bobby” Jindal, said experts. Jindal also converted to Christianity, went by his nickname Bobby and dismissed the label “Indian American.”

At the 2020 Republican National Convention, Haley said, “America is not racist,” while invoking her identity. 

“Her success is attributed to America,” Dhingra said. “And she’s able to then, at the same time, push back on Black freedom struggles … as a way to say this country’s not racist.” 

What are their chances of securing the nomination?

Though both Haley and Ramaswamy have been in the national spotlight in recent months, they’re both still long shots, each polling in the single digits, according to the FiveThirtyEight polling average.

Ramaswamy is reportedly facing attacks on his faith from right-wing Christian groups. Haley has also faced very public racism, with conservative pundit Anne Coulter saying in February that the candidate should “go back to your own country.”

Their efforts to either confront or skirt around their heritage might not win them a GOP nomination, experts said, but they could influence how a Republican constituency views South Asians. 

The two also might also be vying for positions in the next president’s Cabinet, Dhingra said. 

The candidates haven’t spent much time speaking to South Asian American voters directly, but Nikore said to expect an uphill battle. In doing so, the two Republican candidates would face a voting bloc that is overwhelmingly Democratic.

“They’re diametrically opposed,” he said.





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Trump rails against charges on campaign trail, GOP rivals position themselves as alternatives


Trump rails against charges on campaign trail, GOP rivals position themselves as alternatives – CBS News

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Former President Donald Trump was back on the campaign trail over the weekend, using the opportunity to complain about the new charges against him for his handling of classified documents. CBS News chief election and campaign correspondent Robert Costa and CBS News political reporter Aaron Navarro have more.

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Donald Trump hits the campaign trail for the first time since being hit with new charges


Donald Trump hits the campaign trail for the first time since being hit with new charges – CBS News

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Former President Donald Trump is back on the campaign trail for the first time since he was hit with three new federal charges. The allegations point to a pattern of obstruction of justice related to classified documents at his Florida resort, Mar-a-Lago. Christina Ruffini has more.

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Eye Opener: Donald Trump is back on the campaign trail


Eye Opener: Donald Trump is back on the campaign trail – CBS News

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Former President Donald Trump returned to the campaign trail in Iowa while fighting new charges in the classified documents case. Meanwhile, 175 million Americans are under a heat watch or warning this summer as an unrelenting heat wave continues. All that and all that matters in today’s Eye Opener.

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GOP presidential candidates trade barbs on Iowa campaign trail


GOP presidential candidates trade barbs on Iowa campaign trail – CBS News

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Thirteen Republican presidential candidates were campaigning in Iowa this week. Sen. Tim Scott of South Carolina appears to be gaining support in recent polls, but former President Donald Trump still holds a big lead. Ed O’Keefe reports from Iowa.

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