South
Southwest Airlines flight bound for Mexico returns to Houston after 'engine issue'
A Southwest Airlines flight bound for Los Cabos, Mexico, Thursday morning returned to a Texas airport after a reported engine issue.
Flight 3006, carrying 134 passengers, landed safely at William P. Hobby Airport in Houston, according to a statement from Southwest Airlines.
After the incident, the crew followed procedures and helped passengers evacuate the aircraft onto the tarmac, according to Southwest.
UNITED AIRLINES PLANE RETURNS TO DENVER AIRPORT AFTER ‘POSSIBLE WILDLIFE’ STRIKE
No injuries were reported after an engine issue on a Southwest Airlines flight. (KRIV)
Customers will be taken to their final destination of Cabo San Lucas in Los Cabos, Mexico, the airline said.
“We appreciate the professionalism of our flight crew in responding to this situation,” Southwest said in the statement. “Nothing is more important to Southwest than the safety of our customers and employees.”
A Southwest Airlines plane returned to Houston after an apparent engine issue. (KRIV)
NYC HELICOPTER TOUR COMPANY SHUTS DOWN AFTER HUDSON RIVER CRASH THAT KILLED 6: FAA
On Tuesday, a Frontier Airlines flight from Florida to Puerto Rico experienced an issue during landing at Luis Munoz Marin International Airport in Puerto Rico.
Frontier Flight 5306, an Airbus A321, was landing with 228 passengers when it experienced a “mechanical problem” that resulted in one of the wheels on its landing gear breaking off, Puerto Rican newspaper El Nuevo Dia reported.
Southwest Airlines said customers in Texas will be placed on a new flight to Cabo. (KRIV)
FLIGHT PASSENGER ‘GUILTED’ INTO SWAPPING PLANE SEATS OVER BABY SPARKING DEBATE
Flight investigator Luis Irizarry told Puerto Rico’s WAPA-TV it appeared a young co-pilot was flying the plane during the incident and a captain took over to land safely.
No injuries were immediately reported, Fox News Digital previously reported.
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Frontier Airlines told Fox News Digital the flight from Orlando to San Juan “experienced a hard landing upon arrival.”
“The aircraft landed safely, and there were no injuries to the passengers or crew,” Frontier said. “The incident is under investigation.”
Fox News Digital’s Stephen Sorace contributed to this report.
North Carolina
More than 100 vendors celebrate Father’s Day at Highland Brewing
ASHEVILLE, N.C. (WLOS) — Many Father’s Day events were held across western North Carolina, celebrating fathers, including at Highland Brewing, where a market was held.
Over 100 vendors applied to set up for the event on the longest day of the year.
ASHEVILLE GETS A BUZZ ON AT HIGHLAND BREWING AS HONEYFEST CELEBRATES POLLINATORS
Event coordinator Monica Maybille says it’s important to treat fathers to a little gift.
“It’s your dad. You gotta get stuff for your dad. They do a lot for you, so you got to treat them to a little treat sometimes,” Maybille said.
HIGHLAND BREWING HOSTS TRIBUTE PARTY HONORING LATE FOUNDER OSCAR WONG’S COMMUNITY IMPACT
The event included some dad-themed gifts, including grilling supplies and funny T-shirts.
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The next market at Highland Brewing is planned for August and will focus on back-to-school.
Oklahoma
Oh, Hello: Four-Star Oklahoma LB Case Alexander Commits To Penn State
Height/Weight: 6-foot-3, 215 pounds
Hometown/High School: Washington, OK (Washington H.S.)
Ranking: ★★★★ (92 Rivals — No. 123 player overall)
Notable Offers: Kansas State, Michigan, Missouri, Oklahoma, Texas Tech, and Utah
Not very often Penn State goes into Oklahoma and gets a prospect, let alone one that is a four-star that the Sooners very much wanted. Fortunately for Matt Campbell and the Nittany Lions here, the familial relationship paid off, as Case’s brother, Cooper, is a rising redshirt sophomore tight end at Penn State. Doesn’t take a lot of dot connecting to imagine how much that played a part in Case deciding on the Nittany Lions. Still, given the ebbs and flows of the recruiting cycle, not sure you can take any recruitment for granted. So despite the connections Penn State had here, getting a top 10 kid from Oklahoma that the Sooners wanted is a big victory for the new staff in recruiting cycle #1.
Beyond on who his brother is, there’s a reason Case was maybe *the* top linebacker target for Penn State this cycle. This kid is an absolute beast. Tremendous linebacker frame at 6-foot-3, 215 pounds that will allow him to play up to 240 pounds easy, Alexander is what you think of when you imagine the modern day middle linebacker. He has the speed and fluidity to drop back into coverage, but has the physicality and bruteness to win in tight. The first play on his highlight film is his giving a Spinebuster to a poor opponent that rivals that of Arn Anderson’s Spinebuster on The Undertaker at WrestleMania 18.
South-Carolina
Leading Lebanese conservationist dies after Israeli airstrike on her home
BEIRUT — Lebanese conservationist Mona Khalil was first introduced to a green sea turtle as she was drinking a beer on the beach and a female turtle laying eggs threw sand over her, according to a volunteer with the decades-long effort she began to save the endangered animals.
Khalil, 76, died Friday after an Israeli airstrike hit her beachside home two weeks ago. She’s credited with creating a conservation movement in southern Lebanon that protected sea turtle nesting grounds and southern Lebanon’s Mediterranean coast.
Her housekeeper, who is Ethiopian, sustained less-severe injuries in the attack, Khalil’s relatives said. The two women were the only occupants of what was known as “the Orange House” just steps from the al-Mansouri beach near the city of Tyre.
The Israeli military said last week in response to an NPR query that it had no indication it had hit the house but was reviewing its records. It did not respond to a query about when the review might be completed.
Israel has invaded southern Lebanon and is attacking what it says are Iran-backed Hezbollah fighters and infrastructure. The Lebanese health ministry says more than 4,000 people have been killed since the war began on March 2, including at least 600 women and children. Israel says 35 soldiers and a military contractor along with two civilians have been killed in Hezbollah attacks.
Fadia Joumaa, a former volunteer who took over the turtle conservation effort, says Khalil had vowed to stay in her home during the fighting, believing she was safe because she was a civilian and there were no nearby targets.
Khalil trained a generation of volunteers in ecological conservation, protecting the Mediterranean coastline and the endangered sea turtles that travel hundreds of miles to return to the same beaches where they were hatched to lay their eggs.
Human encroachment, trash in the ocean and animal predators that eat the eggs and hatchlings mean newly hatched turtles have only about a 1 in 1,000 chance of surviving to adulthood.
The volunteers find clutches of eggs laid at night in late summer, protecting them with wire mesh. They then help the tiny turtles reach the water once hatched.
Rami Khachab, 32, a herpetologist originally from al-Mansouri, said he started volunteering in high school — going out with Khalil before dawn to walk the beaches looking for turtle nests.
He says after her introduction to the turtles during her evening drink on the beach roughly 25 years ago, Khalil reached out to European turtle protection organizations to learn everything she could about the creatures. She began monitoring nests, collecting data and working to keep the green sea and loggerhead turtle nests safe.
“Through the Orange House, she inspired generations of Lebanese to value and protect their natural heritage and coastal ecosystems. Her work made her one of Lebanon’s most respected voices for marine conservation and biodiversity protection,” said the environmental group Green Southerners.
It called for those responsible for the killings of Khalil and other civilians to be held accountable.
Joumaa, a Lebanese journalist, first met Khalil intending to do a story on her.
“You have to sweat and work hard the way I do before writing a single word,” she says Khalil told her. Joumaa ended up not writing the story, but instead spent years volunteering with her before Khalil retired in 2020.
By that time, Khalil had turned the Orange House into an ecotourism guesthouse, an educational space for children and sea turtle observation point.
Joumaa says Khalil’s work opposing the privatization of beaches and building along the southern coast eventually transformed the turtle nesting grounds into an officially recognized community-based conservation area.
But these conservation efforts, including a successful campaign to ban the use of dynamite in fishing, didn’t always go smoothly. “Mona was a fighter. She did not like diplomacy. There were times when they shot at her house,” Joumaa says, referring to local opponents.
“She always told me: Defend the beach, defend the turtles, defend your country.”
Jawad Rizkhallah contributed reporting from Beirut.
Copyright 2026 NPR
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