A wave of protests moved across Milwaukee over the weekend after police there shot and killed an armed black man. One person was shot Sunday in the second night of protests after police gunned down 23-year-old Sylville Smith the day before. In a press conference late Monday morning, the Milwaukee Chief of Police said there were "many shots fired" on Sunday and 14 were arrested.

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By Doina Chiacu WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The government is offering to help states protect the Nov. 8 U.S. election from hacking or other tampering, in the face of allegations by Republican Party presidential candidate Donald Trump that the system is open to fraud. Homeland Security Secretary Jeh Johnson told state officials in a phone call on Monday that federal cyber security experts could scan for vulnerabilities in voting systems and provide other resources to help protect against infiltration, his office said in a statement. Trump has questioned the integrity of U.S. election systems in recent weeks, but his allegations have been vague and unsubstantiated.
A mayor on the French island of Corsica on Monday became the third nationwide to announce a ban on burqinis, following weekend clashes allegedly sparked by a row over the full-body Islamic swimsuit. The announcement by the mayor of the village of Sisco follows similar prohibitions in the Riviera towns of Cannes and Villeneuve-Loubet, which have also controversially banned the garment from their beaches in recent weeks. Sisco's Socialist mayor Ange-Pierre Vivoni said he aimed to "protect the population" after clashes Saturday in a cove outside his village in the north of the Mediterranean island that left five people injured.
About 4,000 people have fled their homes as a growing wildfire in Northern California burns into a town and destroys at least 10 homes. Cal Fire officials say the fire about 90 miles north of San Francisco has grown to nearly 5 square miles since it erupted Saturday afternoon. On Sunday afternoon, the flames jumped a road and marched into Main Street in Lower Lake, a town of about 1,200.

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Excavations this summer on Mount Lykaion, once worshipped as the birthplace of the god Zeus, uncovered the 3,000-year-old skeleton of a teenager amid a mound of ashes built up over a millennium from sacrificed animals. Excavators say it's too early to speculate on the nature of the teenager's death but the discovery is remarkable because the remote Mount Lykaion was for centuries associated with the most nefarious of Greek cults: Ancient writers - including Plato - linked it with human sacrifice to Zeus, a practice which has very rarely been confirmed by archaeologists anywhere in the Greek world and never on mainland Greece. "Several ancient literary sources mention rumors that human sacrifice took place at the altar, but up until a few weeks ago there has been no trace whatsoever of human bones discovered at the site," said excavator David Gilman Romano, professor of Greek archaeology at the University of Arizona.
The Navajo Nation sued the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency on Tuesday, one year after 3 million gallons of toxic wastewater spilled into three states from an abandoned Colorado gold mine. In a court filing, the Navajo tribe alleged the EPA and other parties "recklessly" burrowed into the Gold King Mine in 2015, releasing waste into water upstream from the tribe's land. A year later, the waterways remain contaminated and the Navajo people have yet to be compensated, according to the complaint that also names EPA contractor Environmental Restoration, the Kinross Gold Corp and Sunnyside Gold Corp. "One of the Navajo people's most important sources of water for life and livelihood was poisoned with some of the worst contaminants known to man, including lead and arsenic," Navajo Nation said in the 48-page complaint filed in the U.S. District Court of New Mexico.
On a forward somersault on the balance beam, the 2016 Olympic all-around champion Simone Biles put her hands down on the beam to steady herself. A few more balance checks followed, and she earned a 14.733–a strong score, but not enough to overtake Sanne Wevers of the Netherlands, who won gold. It was Biles’ lowest score on the event throughout the week’s competition in Rio, but still enough for bronze.
A Florida man drowned Sunday while saving his wife from a Miami Beach rip current. The man, identified as 34-year-old Sherrod Whittington, was visiting from Ft. Myers when the powerful currents nearly swept his wife, Kendra Smith, to sea, according to Miami Beach fire officials. Sherrod Whittington, 34, was visiting from Ft. Myers when powerful currents nearly swept his wife, Kendra Smith, to sea, according to Miami Beach fire officials.
The Philippine Islands has a problem. It has international law on its side in its quarrel with China over maritime territory, but no policeman walking his beat to enforce the law. On Aug. 2, China’s defense minister, Chang Wanquan, even said China must prepare for a “people’s war” at sea.
Online court records showed multiple charges against the 23-year-old Smith dating back to 2013. Smith was accused in a shooting last year and charged with recklessly endangering safety, a felony. The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel reported that Smith was subsequently accused of pressuring the victim to recant statements that identified him as the gunman and was charged with trying to intimidate a witness.

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