Across America|News|
How Does This Happen In America? + Very Strange Juneteenth Event
Quickly, your 5-minute read for a smart start to the day: “Dear Intern”; your weekly facepalm moment; what we’re reading on Juneteenth.

How to contact me: beth.dalbey@patch.com.
I'm a longtime community journalist and started with Patch.com in 2011.
My career has been solely focused in journalism, except for a brief detour in 2007 when I joined the communications department of a scientific research institute studying the evolution of language in bonobos and other great apes.
I left journalism for that brief 3-year period because I knew it would be an adventure – it was! – and worked as a freelance writer and consultant after that position was eliminated in 2010.
Beliefs
Politics: I’m a registered independent. I will vote every time, regardless of party affiliation, for the individual with the best ideas to make our communities more livable.
Religion: I grew up attending the United Methodist Church in my small hometown. It was a great foundation that taught me most of what I believe is right and wrong. I believe in a supreme being. I respect others’ right to believe what they believe, as long as they’re not proselytizing on the taxpayer’s dime, and I think this whole business of seeing everyone who does good works as an angel or every marvelous outcome as a miracle cheapens both.
Quickly, your 5-minute read for a smart start to the day: “Dear Intern”; your weekly facepalm moment; what we’re reading on Juneteenth.

A remarkable thing happened after estranged dad’s 80,000-penny dump; town’s water tower sale is remarkable, too, but for a different reason.
Here’s your 5-minute read to start the day: Stealing from volunteer firemen; Brood X Files; through NASA photographer Bill Ingalls’ lens.
NASA Photographer Bill Ingalls has taken us along on explorations in space for more than three decades; here are 11 of his favorite photos.
Dad’s 80,000-penny dump sparks generosity to shelter— just in time as a federal grant fund that helps crime victims nationwide dries up.
A Brooksville, Florida, businessman just wanted a building on the property where the water tower sits, but he got a lot more for $55,000.
To save his pup’s life, 8-year-old sells a prize; a couple forced to marry abroad renew vows at Pride Month celebration; the graduate is 94.
A Virginia father made his final $800 child support payment in pennies. His daughter one-upped him, in the classiest way possible.
In Washington, Linda Oswald fretted about her dog, who ran off after a car crash. Next door in Idaho, the Potters had their own dog dilemma.
A new survey sheds, ahem, light on whether people call the flying insects that emit light from their abdomens fireflies or lightning bugs.
Joshua Hall impersonated members of the Trump family to rip off hundreds of Americans, federal prosecutors said.
As Karen memes gained popularity with the public, the name Karen lost favor with parents, according to Social Security Administration data.
Brood X cicadas have caused a stir — and in Cincinnati, a car wreck. The cicada wasn’t cited; it already has death sentence hanging over it.
The outage affected news, government and social media websites, showing how dependent the internet is on a handful of Big Tech companies.
Galeophobia — the fear of sharks — is real, but the chances you’ll be attacked by a shark in the waters of the U.S. coast are almost nil.
The intelligence report due June 25 doesn’t confirm mysterious sightings are alien spacecraft, but doesn’t deny it either, officials say.
Barbers still busy in 140-year-old shop; a veteran is homeless no more; how family history tastes; a pitch against ALS; geese go shopping.
Christopher Nolan found a bottle in Marathon, Florida. Inside was a message dated May 16, 1987.
The state’s "stand your ground" law doesn’t apply to iguanas because they're not human, said the DA prosecuting the Florida case.
The nation’s oldest historically Black university erased $375,000 in student loan debt to give 2020 and 2021 graduates a fresh start.