Washington
USC Cal game delayed due to protesters demonstrating on field

The football game between Cal and the University of Southern California was disrupted by a group of protesters Saturday.
Protesters stormed the field and sat themselves on the 50 yard line at the beginning of the game. As police physically removed them, game play was delayed by eight minutes. Police would eventually arrest them.
MAINE SHOOTING: WHAT WE KNOW ABOUT THE INVESTIGATION LEADING UP TO DISCOVERY OF BODY
JOSE CARLOS FAJARDO/AP
The protesters donned t-shirts that read: “Justice for Ivonne,” in reference to Ivonne del Valle, a Spanish and Portuguese associate professor from UC Berkeley. Del Valle has been suspended from the university for harassment and stalking of fellow professor Joshua Clover of the UC Davis English department.
Berkeley students told a local outlet of their plans to interrupt the game. They also have plans for a hunger strike in de Valle’s honor.
Cal’s California Memorial Stadium is within a mile of the Berkeley campus.

JOSE CARLOS FAJARDO/AP
CLICK HERE TO READ MORE FROM THE WASHINGTON EXAMINER
Berkeley is del Valle’s alma mater, where she received her PhD in 2004. She previously taught at Michigan State.
Del Valle is on paid administrative leave, but protesters are seeking her immediate reinstatement. It remains to be seen whether she will return after the Fall 2023 semester.

Washington
Washington football legend Darrell Green reminds us of the burgundy and golden days of RFK – WTOP News

Who did the Washington Commanders turn to when they started a public relations push to secure the new RFK stadium? Darrell Green, of course.
Who did the Washington Commanders turn to when they started a public relations push to secure the new RFK stadium? No. 28, of course.
Hall of Fame defensive back Darrell Green is the star of a new social media video from the Commanders that shows the burgundy and golden days from RFK, along with shots from different areas of D.C.
As you see famous moments from RFK, including the legendary stadium shaking from fans jumping up and down, you hear Green saying things like: “To be together at RFK is to know we in this city are part of something bigger,” and, “For 40 years, I’ve seen so much greatness in the District.”
As you watch the video and listen to the 1983 first-round draft pick, who played every season of his 20-year career for the burgundy and gold, you are reminded how special that stadium was and how successful the team used to be during their 36 seasons at 2400 East Capitol Street SE.
You might think to yourself, is it just the nostalgia making me feel that way? No, the numbers don’t lie.
Washington’s record at RFK was 162 wins, 101 losses and three ties. At Northwest Stadium, previously FedExField, the record stands at 106 wins, 119 losses and one tie.
Those numbers do include playoff games.
In the 12 playoff games at RFK, Washington only lost one. In comparison, at the team’s current stadium, Washington has only won one of its four playoff games.
The Commanders put Green front and center in their PR push to counter the loud forces that are against the new stadium and the proposed $1.1 billion D.C. investment for the RFK Stadium redevelopment project.
Local groups such as Homes Not Stadiums are encouraging D.C. residents to attend the D.C. Council hearing on the stadium proposal on July 29.
Ward 6 Council member Charles Allen also went to social media to encourage people to make their voices heard at the meeting.
“Listen, we know this deal is not good and has to change,” Allen said. “$1.1 billion is a starting point, which is the second highest in history of a stadium subsidy.”
So it seems once again the owners of Washington’s football team are counting on the ageless wonder to win one more for old D.C. at RFK.
Get breaking news and daily headlines delivered to your email inbox by signing up here.
© 2025 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.
Washington
Washington Post Publisher Seeks to Crush Newsroom Dissent | Press Watch

Embattled Washington Post publisher Will Lewis’s my-way-or-the-highway memo to staff on Wednesday threatens to destroy what’s left of the newsroom’s talent pool – and reputation.
The memo urges “those who do not feel aligned with the company’s plan” to take an immediate buyout and leave. Those who remain, Lewis write, must “be united as a team with a strong belief and passion in where we are heading.”
It’s probably one of the worst memos every written by a publisher, for countless reasons – starting with the fact that Lewis notably does not have a plan and nobody knows where he’s heading.
The man has been a cipher, hiding from the newsroom, and the memo is characteristically full of buzzwords that signify nothing.
He writes of having made the Post “more appealing to, and trusted by, today’s audiences” – a ridiculous and unsubstantiated boast.
He writes of “launching new, engaging product improvements such as From the Source.” “From the Source” is a tiny pilot project that allows certain sources in news stories to add comments as annotations. It’s hardly a showpiece.
And he writes of “embracing AI rapidly across all of our workflows,” whatever the heck that means, and it can’t be good.
So in the absence of anything remotely like a recognizable journalistic strategy, what Lewis is basically asking for is a pledge of loyalty to him personally — a promise not to complain, no matter what he does next.
And that’s particularly inappropriate given the fact that he is, on a personal level, a morally bankrupt figure — having been hip-deep in the 2011 cover-up of Rupert Murdoch’s massive phone-hacking scandal. (Lewis, a Brit, cut his teeth working for the right-wing publishing magnate.)
After being hired as Post publisher in 2023 — to almost everyone’s astonishment – Lewis tried to cover up his role in the cover-up, pressuring former top editor Sally Buzbee not to run a story about his involvement then forcing her out after she defied him. Then he tried to bribe NPR reporter David Folkenflik into dropping his story about the allegation.
To say that Lewis has failed to win over the newsroom is an understatement. Back in March, two of the newspaper’s most respected alumni felt obliged to intervene on behalf of the staff, begging Post owner Jeff Bezos to fire Lewis. There was no response.
Another enormous problem with the memo is that trying to purge a newsroom of complainers is a great way to get rid of your best reporters and editors. Many – though not all – great journalists are notoriously cynical. They question everything. And they don’t check their brains at the door when it comes to their own institution.
Getting rid of people who question newsroom policy is a great way to both lose talented journalists and, in the absence of internal pushback, make really bad decisions.
And perhaps worst of all, those who stay will now be forever tarnished as enablers and sycophants.
Oh, wait, one more thing: The memo is smarmy as hell, full of insincerity like “If you choose to move away from The Post, thank you for all your contributions, and I truly wish you the best of luck.” It’s an insult to anyone receiving it.
All in all, it’s a recipe for disaster. And it comes after several other disasters that have led to numerous resignations and mass subscriber loss.
In October, hundreds of thousands of readers canceled their subscriptions after news broke that Bezos had ordered the editorial board not to endorse Kamala Harris for president, as they intended to do.
Then in February, Bezos announced a directive that the Post’s editorial pages would henceforth promote “personal liberties and free markets” and would refuse to publish pieces opposing those principles. Several top editorial-page editors and columnists fled soon after.
And over the last year, other publications – notably including the Atlantic, the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal, and CNN – have picked off much of the newsroom’s marquee talent.
The New Yorker in May reasonably asked the question: “Is Jeff Bezos Selling Out the Washington Post?”
What’s left in the Washington Post is not nothing. Some reporters continue to do excellent work, despite the circumstances.
But I fear this memo will drive even more of the best people away, while demoralizing those who remain even further.
Simply put, the Washington Post, as I’ve written before, has no future as an independent news organization as long as Jeff Bezos owns it – and as long as Lewis remains publisher.
This new memo suggests that Lewis is confident in his position, and that’s maybe the worst part of it all.
Washington
Possible sighting of Washington man wanted in the deaths of his 3 daughters prompts search in Idaho

BOISE — Federal authorities in Idaho are following up on a possible sighting over the weekend of a Washington state man wanted in connection with the deaths of his three daughters.
The U.S. Marshals Service Greater Idaho Fugitive Task Force said it had received a tip Saturday from a family recreating near a camping area in Idaho’s Sawtooth National Forest that they saw a man whose description was consistent with that of Travis Decker.
Decker has been wanted since June 2, when a sheriff’s deputy in Washington found his truck and the bodies of his three daughters – 9-year-old Paityn Decker, 8-year-old Evelyn Decker and 5-year-old Olivia Decker – at a campground outside Leavenworth, Washington. The discovery came three days after he failed to return the girls to their mother’s home in Wenatchee, about 100 miles (160 kilometers) east of Seattle, following a scheduled visit.
Authorities in Washington on June 10 said they believed they’d spotted Decker, a former soldier, near a remote alpine lake in a popular backpacking area in the Cascade Range. Tracking teams followed up on a tip from hikers who reported seeing a lone hiker who appeared to be ill-prepared for the conditions.
But he has not been found.
Eric Toms, supervisory deputy U.S. Marshal with the District of Boise, said the agency was receiving more tips from the public following the statement the task force released Sunday. Toms in an email said the agency was evaluating each tip and that a search team involving the marshals service, the U.S. Forest Service and the Camas County Sheriff’s Office set out Monday.
He said authorities planned to speak with local residents and people camping or recreating in the area. He said Decker has a history of hitchhiking and encouraged motorists to not pick up any hitchhikers.
Toms said search efforts Monday were being conducted by air and on the ground, including by dirt bike. He didn’t have any additional information to immediately release.
The forest area is nearly 600 miles (965 kilometers) from the lake where authorities were searching last month.
Jason Knight, who is the director, co-founder and an instructor at Alderleaf Wilderness College in Monroe, Washington, described the terrain in the region where authorities were searching as rugged and challenging, with often significant temperature variations between day and night.
In the summer months, it’s possible to forage and fish, and if someone is trying to avoid attention, they might raid campground sites or search trash cans outside of towns, he said.
The Marshals Service is offering a reward of up to $20,000 for information leading to Decker’s capture.
Copyright © 2025 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.
-
Business1 week ago
See How Trump’s Big Bill Could Affect Your Taxes, Health Care and Other Finances
-
Culture1 week ago
16 Mayors on What It’s Like to Run a U.S. City Now Under Trump
-
News1 week ago
Video: Who Loses in the Republican Policy Bill?
-
Politics1 week ago
Video: Trump Signs the ‘One Big Beautiful Bill’ Into Law
-
Science1 week ago
Federal contractors improperly dumped wildfire-related asbestos waste at L.A. area landfills
-
Technology1 week ago
Meet Soham Parekh, the engineer burning through tech by working at three to four startups simultaneously
-
Politics1 week ago
Congressman's last day in office revealed after vote on Trump's 'Big, Beautiful Bill'
-
World1 week ago
Russia-Ukraine war: List of key events, day 1,227