
EXCLUSIVE We witnessed teammates be sidelined by transgender athletes. Why we're now one step closer to restoring integrity in women's sports
With the US Supreme Court 's decision this week to review lower court rulings favoring transgender athletes in and West , the women and their attorneys from the Alliance Defending Freedom will have a chance this fall to impact gender policies across several states, if not the entire country.
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Daily Mail
14 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Inside Barron Trump's outrageously lavish childhood as president's son bags his first girlfriend
Barron Trump was spoiled with expensive tuition and lived in a home fit for a king during his lavish childhood. The 19-year-old student, who is the only child of President Donald Trump and his wife Melania Trump, was born on March 20, 2006, and has remained largely out of the spotlight. But as reports emerge that the teen has bagged himself his first ever girlfriend, Femail delves into Barron's luxurious upbringing, taking a particularly close look at the hundreds of thousands spent on his education. Barron was born and raised in New York City and spent much of his childhood living at his dad's extravagant penthouse apartment, Trump Tower, in Manhattan. The sprawling home, worth an estimated $65 million, boasts of breathtaking views of Central Park and the Manhattan skyline. According to reports, Barron has a floor of his own in the lavish residence, with the home located on the top three floors of Trump Tower. Barron attended school in New York City until 2017, when his dad took office for his first term in the White House. He then attended middle and high schools in different locations across the country. For his primary education, Barron went to Manhattan's prestigious Columbia Grammar and Preparatory School. Tuition at the elite school is billed at $64,340 per year and increases by about $1,000 once you enter high school. Trump started his first term as president halfway through the school year in January 2017, so Barron remained with Melania in New York to finish up his time at Columbia. In September 2017, he started sixth grade at St. Andrew's Episcopal in Potomac, Maryland - just about a 45-minute car drive from Washington, D.C. The yearly middle school tuition at St. Andrew's cost $52,290. Once Trump's first term was up in 2020, Barron moved to Palm Beach, Florida and finished school there, at Oxbridge Academy in West Palm Beach. He graduated from Oxbridge Academy in Palm Beach, Florida, last May. Barron is currently a student at NYU and has just completed his freshman year. Melania and Baron attend the annual playground party with New York families to support Central Park's playgrounds on May 30, 2007 He has returned to live at Trump Tower while he completes his college education. President Trump revealed last month his 'formula for good parenting.' 'I always said the same thing. I said: no drugs, no alcohol, no cigarettes. I also would say don't get tattoos, but I don't say it too strongly, because a lot of people have gotten tattoos, and that's what they choose to do,' he told The New York Post in a podcast interview. Many of the president's supporters at rallies sport tattoos as do some members of Trump's Cabinet, including Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth. The president has made a point of not drinking, as his older brother, Fred Trump Jr., suffered from alcoholism and died young, at age 42. He boasted that his five children - Donald Trump Jr., Ivanka, Eric, Tiffany and Barron - were 'born smart.' 'Barron is great. He is very tall and good,' he added.


Daily Mail
21 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Dodgers broadcaster Orel Hershiser makes savage remark about Astros cheating scandal during blowout loss
Los Angeles Dodgers pitching great and current broadcaster Orel Hershiser made a savage remark about the Houston Astros cheating scandal during a game between the teams on Friday. It was a blowout loss for the Dodgers, with things rarely looking good for the home team before the 18-1 lopsided final result. It was in the middle of a 4-run third inning for the Astros when Hershiser brought up the scandal, after Cam Smith doubled off Los Angeles rookie pitcher Ben Casparius. The Astros were caught stealing signs from rival teams during the 2017 and 2018 seasons, which led to several firings, a $5million fine, and Major League Baseball stripping the franchise of two first-round, and a pair of second-round, draft picks. Some players and coaches' legacies will be forever tied to the sign-stealing scandal, including AJ Hinch, Jose Altuve, Carlos Correa, Alex Cora, Carlos Beltran, and more. 'I don't want to open an old wound, but in some ways, they're swinging at these breaking balls like they know what is coming,' Hershiser said on SportsNet LA. Hershiser appears not to have gotten in any trouble for the remark, as it would have played positively with a Dodgers-favored broadcast. The boos continued to come down on Altuve at Dodger Stadium this weekend, as the fans clearly have not forgotten about the scandal. Other fan bases have not forgotten about the Astros misdeeds either, namely the New York Yankees, who Houston defeated in the ALCS before besting the Dodgers in the World Series. Correa has not played for the Astros since 2021, but is still mercilessly booed by Yankees fans in the Bronx whenever his new team, the Minnesota Twins, come to New York City. The Astros also won the American League in 2019, 2021, and 2022, with MLB finding no wrongdoing from the team during those seasons. Yet, the Astros having success will likely come with an asterisk for some fans and broadcasters forever.


Reuters
39 minutes ago
- Reuters
Astros use 4-run third inning to race past Dodgers
July 6 - Yainer Diaz hit a home run and Framber Valdez recovered from a wobbly start as the visiting Houston Astros followed a blowout victory Friday with a 6-4 win over the Los Angeles Dodgers on Saturday. Zack Short had a two-run double in a four-run third inning as the Astros had no problem finding more offense one day after an 18-1 victory in L.A. Valdez (10-4) gave up four runs on seven hits over six innings with seven strikeouts to hold off the Dodgers, who lost consecutive games for the first time since June 6-7. Houston's Josh Hader finished the eighth and completed the ninth as well for his 25th save. Shohei Ohtani made his fourth start of the season for the Dodgers and went two scoreless innings on 31 pitches. Left-hander Justin Wrobleski (4-3) followed by allowing five runs (four earned) over 4 2/3 innings. Mookie Betts and Miguel Rojas each hit home runs for the Dodgers, who had won 15 of 18 games before Houston arrived in town. The Dodgers jumped out to an early 2-0 lead, getting a home run from Betts in the first inning, his 11th, before Rojas made it 2-0 in the second on an RBI single. Betts' home run was his second in three games after not hitting one in 20 consecutive contests. With Ohtani no longer on the mound in the third inning, the Astros went to work on Wrobleski. Short belted a two-run double to tie the game before Cam Smith and Christian Walker each had RBI singles to complete the four-run frame. Houston made it 5-2 in the fourth inning when Diaz hit his 11th home run of the year to right-center. Rojas brought Los Angeles within a run in the bottom of the fourth with a two-run homer off the top of the wall in left-center, his fourth of the season. In the seventh, Betts led off for the Dodgers with a hit to left field that got past the Astros' Cooper Hummel and rolled to the wall. Betts, though, was thrown out trying to take third base on the miscue. The Astros padded their lead to 6-4 in the eighth on a sacrifice fly to left field by Victor Caratini. --Field Level Media