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Sports May 13, 2026

Premier League Live: Manchester City vs Crystal Palace Title Showdown

Manchester City hosts Crystal Palace in a high-stakes Premier League encounter at the Etihad Stadiu…
The Etihad Showdown: City's Title PushManchester City hosts Crystal Palace at the Etihad Stadium in Manchester.The match kicks off at 8pm (19:00 GMT) on May 13, 2026.Described as a "crunch late-season match," this fixture is critical for the hosts' championship aspirations.Stakes and ImplicationsWith the season reaching its climax, Manchester City enters this fixture as a title hopeful. A victory here is not merely about securing three points; it is about maintaining momentum against a resilient Crystal Palace side that could disrupt the title race.Shaping the Title RaceThis match represents a pivotal juncture in the English Premier League. The outcome could significantly alter the final standings, potentially separating the genuine contenders from the chasing pack in the final stretch of the campaign.Match OutlookExpect a high-intensity atmosphere as Manchester City looks to capitalize on home advantage to edge closer to the championship trophy.
#Manchester City #Crystal Palace #Premier League
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Culture May 13, 2026

Smithsonian Celebrates America's 250th Anniversary with 250 Objects in New Exhibition

The Smithsonian National Museum of American History is marking the 250th anniversary of US independ…
Smithsonian's Monumental Celebration of America's 250 Years To paraphrase the musical Rent, 131,487,300 minutes – how do you measure, measure 250 years? Especially in a country navigating an election year fraught with divisions and disagreements over basic facts? That is the challenge facing the Smithsonian National Museum of American History in Washington DC as it marks the semiquincentennial of US independence. The museum's answer is with 250 objects that tell the American story, ranging from a revolutionary war-era gunboat to gloves worn by a "Miracle on Ice" hockey player, from Thomas Jefferson's desk to a Donald Trump fan's "Make America great again" hat. A Museum-Wide Journey Through American History Opening on 14 May, "In Pursuit of Life, Liberty & Happiness" will display 250 objects encompassing 250,000 sq ft across all three floors of the museum. They range from old to new, from big to small and from sublime to mundane. Seventy-six of them – many rarely or never seen by the public – will be concentrated in cases lining the entry halls, while the remainder will be embedded throughout the museum's existing galleries, connected by a "ribbon" design to guide visitors on a historical treasure hunt. Each is paired with an action verb to underscore the view of democracy as a "highly participatory sport." Among the star attractions is the Philadelphia, a 53ft, flat-bottomed wooden gunboat constructed in the chaotic, sweltering summer of 1776. On a recent preview tour, visitors stepped into a climate-controlled enclosure at the museum where the air was thick with the scent of 100% acetone. Behind viewing windows that allow the public to see the work in progress, two conservators clad in headlamps and respirators were meticulously wielding soft and stiff bristle brushes, dental picks and wooden dowel rods to strip away decades of accumulated lacquer from a rusted iron cannon and its surrounding timber. By the Numbers: The Scale of the Exhibition The exhibition features 250 objects spread across 250,000 square feet of museum space. Seventy-six of these objects – many rarely or never seen by the public – will be concentrated in cases lining the entry halls. The Philadelphia gunboat itself weighs 16,000 pounds and was constructed in 1776. The wreck languished underwater for 159 years before being salvaged in 1935, fully intact with its armament and hundreds of artifacts scattered across its deck. When raised, the boat revealed about 600 to 800 items, including cannons, carriages, wheels, a stew pot, a melting pot for pitch, shoe leather, buttons from regimental coats, and even a leather button that was probably from someone's breeches. Reframing America's Complex Narrative "How do you structure a commemoration, celebration and time for reflection?" asks Anthea Hartig, the museum's director. "What we landed on were those moments where individuals or communities had fought for recognition and advocated for their own sense of identity and self in their role in creating and becoming a part of the United States. But we also wanted to do the playful." Hartig describes the US as "amazing, beautiful, complicated", and cites the African American writer James Baldwin's celebrated observation: "American history is longer, larger, more various, more beautiful, and more terrible than anything anyone has ever said about it." The exhibition captures both the monumental and the intimate aspects of American history. Alongside iconic items like Thomas Jefferson's portable desk on which he drafted the Declaration of Independence, the Star-Spangled Banner that inspired the national anthem, and George Washington's military uniform, are personal artifacts like a faux-pearl necklace worn by Abigail Adams in the mid-18th century. The Future of Historical Commemoration Hartig adds: "We believe that this anniversary is so important not only to the nation but the world, and that our past 250 years are filled with so much history that it takes an entire museum to do it justice." The exhibition also incorporates modern technology to enhance the visitor experience, including a virtual reality experience that transports visitors back to the Philadelphia's construction 250 years ago. As the museum continues to preserve and interpret America's complex past, the exhibition represents a new approach to historical commemoration – one that embraces the full spectrum of American experiences, from the revolutionary to the contemporary, and from the sublime to the mundane.
#Smithsonian #American History #Museum Exhibition
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Sports May 13, 2026

Complete List of FIFA World Cup Winners

Argentina is the current FIFA World Cup champion, having won their third title in 2022. Brazil is t…
The Current Champions Argentina head into the FIFA World Cup 2026 as the reigning champions after dethroning France at the Qatar World Cup 2022 to win their third title. Historical World Cup Winners Brazil is the most successful team in the tournament’s history, having won the title five times. Here is a list of all the previous World Cup winners: 1930 – Uruguay – Uruguay hosted and won the inaugural World Cup, defeating Argentina in the final. 1934 – Italy – Italy won the first of their four World Cups in this edition. 1938 – Italy – Italy won the last World Cup before World War II put the tournament on hold for 12 years. 1950 – Uruguay – La Celeste famously defeated Brazil in the final at the Maracana to win their second World Cup. 1954 – West Germany – West Germany won the World Cup hosted by Switzerland. 1958 – Brazil – A 17-year-old Pele scored six goals as Brazil lifted their first World Cup. 1962 – Brazil – Brazil became the second team after Italy to successfully defend a World Cup crown. 1966 – England – Football “came home” for the first and only time so far in 1966 when England won the World Cup at Wembley. 1970 – Brazil – Pele got his hands on the trophy for the third time in 1970. No player in history has won as many World Cups as him. 1974 – West Germany – Led by Gerd Mueller, West Germany won their second World Cup. 1978 – Argentina – Argentina won their first World Cup in 1978, defeating the Netherlands in the final. 1982 – Italy – A Paolo Rossi-inspired Italy won the 1982 tournament in Spain. 1986 – Argentina – The legend of Diego Maradona was written at the 1986 World Cup in Mexico, where the mercurial genius almost single-handedly led Argentina to glory. 1990 – West Germany – Maradona’s Argentina reached the final in 1990 as well but were thwarted by West Germany, which won eight months after the Berlin Wall fell and three months before Germany’s unification. 1994 – Brazil – The first World Cup in North America was won by Brazil, which claimed their fourth title in the United States. 1998 – France – France won the tournament at home with players like Zinedine Zidane, Thierry Henry and Patrick Vieira ushering in a new era of success for Les Bleus. 2002 – Brazil – Brazil won a record fifth World Cup, overcoming Germany in the final. 2006 – Italy – Despite Serie A being rocked by match-fixing allegations, Italy showed great resolve to win the 2006 edition. 2010 – Spain – Spain’s possession style of football saw them win their first World Cup in South Africa in 2010. 2014 – Germany – After making the semifinals in each of the previous two editions, Germany finally got their hands on the trophy again in 2014. 2018 – France – Didier Deschamps, who captained France to their 1998 triumph, won the World Cup for a second time in 2018 as coach. 2022 – Argentina – Lionel Messi, one of the greatest footballers the world has ever seen, won the one title that had eluded him in one of the greatest finals the World Cup has ever seen. After battling France to a 2-2 draw after 90 minutes and a 3-3 draw after extra time, Argentina won 4-2 on penalties. The Legacy of the World Cup Eight countries have won the World Cup in its 92-year history. The tournament continues to be a pinnacle of achievement in international football.
#FIFA World Cup #Argentina #Brazil
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Entertainment May 13, 2026

Lost Vaughan Williams Song Sparks Questions About Other Musical Treasures Still to be Discovered

The discovery of a previously unknown song by Ralph Vaughan Williams in London's Morley College arc…
The Discovery of a Lost Musical MasterpieceThe discovery of a new work by Ralph Vaughan Williams has set the world alight this week. In a box in the archives of London's Morley College, Elaine Andrews came across a previously unknown Vaughan Williams song titled "Before the Mirror," which sets a Swinburne poem inspired by a Whistler painting. The manuscript's workings, its crossings-out and corrections, offer a fascinating insight into Vaughan Williams's creative process, revealing music of surprising tonal adventure and expressive ambiguity written shortly after his marriage in 1897.The Vast Landscape of Lost Musical WorksBut a single song pales into comparison compared to the musical riches that may be lying dormant in libraries, archives and lofts all over the world. One of the most significant musical finds of all time was the treasure-trove of manuscripts by Florence Price found in a derelict house in Illinois in 2009, which included her two violin concertos, Fourth Symphony and dozens of other pieces. This discovery revealed not only wonderful music, but also pointed to the priorities – and prejudices – of music historians.The Systematic Erasure of Female ComposersThat discovery revealed not only wonderful music, but also pointed to the priorities – and prejudices – of music historians. The discovery of previous unknown manuscripts by the most familiar composers – a single page of Mozart, an exercise by Beethoven, a sketch by Haydn – often happen because historians know where to look for ephemera of lives whose every artefact has been combed over for centuries. But that had not been the case for Price, or for other composers who have been musicologically marginalised. Their work is supposed to be "lost" simply because no one had been looking for it.Rediscovering Forgotten Female VoicesThat's why some of the deepest holes in musical history – works that we know composers wrote and that were performed in their lifetimes, but which their biographies say are now "lost" – are by female composers. Francesca Caccini wrote more than 13 stage works in her lifetime in 17th-century Italy, but only one survives today. Caccini's dozen other operas may currently be "lost," but have researchers been looking for them as assiduously as they search for a page by Bruckner or a letter by Mahler?The Case of Joseph BologneThe same goes for at least three complete operas by Joseph Bologne, who lived an extraordinary life in 18th-century France, as composer, violinist, orchestral leader, fencer and soldier, becoming a colonel in the revolution's only all-black regiment. But Bologne's legacy suffered the prejudices of a culture that reinstated slavery and which erased his contribution to the revolution and to musical society after his death in 1799. Now that Bologne's work is at last finding its place there must be renewed focus on recovering these vital "lost" operas from the oblivion that they never deserved.Legendary Lost Works We Can Only Dream OfMind you, there is also lost music whose absence has been known of for centuries – we can only dream of what could be. Bach's St Mark Passion and scores of his cantatas, Monteverdi's Arianna and other stage works, the dozens of quartets and sonatas that Brahms threw out as unworthy, or Sibelius's Eighth Symphony, likely consigned to the flames by Sibelius himself.New Leadership in Classical MusicIn other classical music news, the Royal Scottish National Orchestra has announced that Lithuanian conductor Giedrė Šlekytė is to be their next music director, succeeding Thomas Søndergård from the 2027 season. The appointment comes after just two projects: a well-received week of Mahler's First Symphony, and a subsequent recording session. As the RSNO's chief executive Alistair Mackie said: "When she joined us last year, her musical ideas and the way she works with players spoke for themselves. Giedrė gives the orchestra room to breathe and to play."
#Vaughan Williams #classical music #lost compositions
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Sports May 13, 2026

EFL Clubs Set to Vote on New Squad Cost Ratio Rules, Widening Financial Gap Between Championship and League One

EFL clubs will vote on Friday to replace the current profitability and sustainability rules with a …
The Upcoming Vote on Squad Cost Ratio in the ChampionshipEFL Championship clubs are set to vote on a proposal that would align their financial framework with the Premier League from next season. The plan replaces the existing profitability and sustainability (P&S) rules with a squad cost ratio (SCR) system that caps player‑related spending at 85% of football revenue. An annual equity injection of roughly £10m would be allowed to count as revenue, expanding clubs’ spending capacity.Financial Numbers Behind the Proposed ChangesCurrent P&S loss limit in the Championship: £39m over a three‑year period.Proposed SCR cap: 85% of football revenue.Equity injection counted as revenue: about £10m per year.Average League One owner investment this season: £9.6m (up from £2.6m four years ago).League One salary‑cost management protocol (SCMP) would fall from 60% to 50% of turnover.Potential Shift in Competitive Balance Across the EFLThe divergent reforms would likely widen the financial gap between the Championship and League One. Championship clubs would gain greater freedom to invest in squads to chase promotion, while League One clubs would be forced to tighten budgets, potentially boosting the medium‑term value of their assets and attracting external buyers.What the Vote Outcome Could Mean for English FootballBoth proposals require at least 16 of the 24 clubs in each division to vote in favour. Sources suggest the votes could be tight, reflecting differing views on financial regulation. If adopted, the Championship would move in step with the Premier League’s SCR, while League One would operate under a stricter SCMP, reshaping spending dynamics and possibly influencing promotion‑relegation battles in the coming seasons.
#EFL #Championship #League One
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Politics May 13, 2026

Trump Backs Iraq’s Prime Minister‑Designate Ali al‑Zaidi: Strategic Calculus

Former President Donald Trump announced his support for Iraq’s prime‑minister‑designate Ali al‑Zaid…
Executive Summary: Trump’s Unexpected EndorsementOn 13 May 2026, former U.S. President Donald Trump publicly declared his backing of Iraq’s prime‑minister‑designate Ali al‑Zaidi. The move, coming amid a fragile coalition government in Baghdad, signals a potential shift in Washington’s approach to Iraqi politics.Political Context: Why Trump Chose Ali al‑ZaidiTrump’s decision appears rooted in three observable factors:Geopolitical alignment: Al‑Zaidi’s platform emphasizes stronger security ties with the United States.Economic incentives: The designates’ openness to U.S. investment in oil and reconstruction projects aligns with Trump’s “America First” economic narrative.Regional stability: Supporting a leader perceived as capable of curbing Iranian influence fits Trump’s broader Middle‑East strategy.Fiscal Implications: Aid and Investment FiguresNo new financial commitments were announced alongside the endorsement. However, existing U.S. assistance to Iraq—approximately $1.5 billion annually for security and development—remains a baseline for any future cooperation under al‑Zaidi’s administration.Regional Ripple Effects: Shifts in Iraqi Power DynamicsThe endorsement could accelerate al‑Zaidi’s consolidation of power, pressuring rival factions to negotiate. Neighboring states, particularly Iran and Saudi Arabia, may reassess their diplomatic postures, potentially leading to a recalibration of proxy activities within Iraq.Looking Ahead: What Trump’s Backing Means for Iraq‑US RelationsAnalysts anticipate three possible trajectories:Enhanced bilateral cooperation: A Trump‑endorsed government may secure more favorable terms for U.S. firms in oil and infrastructure.Political volatility: Opposition groups could mobilize against perceived external interference, risking protests or parliamentary deadlock.Strategic realignment: A stable, U.S.-friendly leadership might prompt Washington to increase its diplomatic footprint, including a potential revival of a U.S. embassy advisory team.In the coming months, the durability of Trump’s support—and its translation into concrete policy—will be a key barometer for Iraq’s political stability and the broader U.S. strategy in the Middle East.
#Donald Trump #Ali al‑Zaidi #Iraq
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Sports May 13, 2026

Iga Swiatek Dominates Jessica Pegula to Reach Italian Open Semi-Finals

Iga Swiatek swept past Jessica Pegula 6-1, 6-2 to reach the Italian Open semi-finals, where she wil…
Iga Swiatek's Dominant Performance Iga Swiatek gave another indication that she might be back to her brilliant best after destroying Jessica Pegula 6-1, 6-2 on Wednesday and breezing into the Italian Open semi-finals. The Match Details A three-time champion in Rome, Swiatek took little more than an hour to take care of fifth seed Pegula on centre court, in a show of force on her preferred surface not seen since she last won the French Open two years ago. Upcoming Matches and Potential Opponents Swiatek has set up a clash with either second seed Elena Rybakina or Elina Svitolina in the last four. A potential decider with reigning Roland Garros champion Coco Gauff awaits for the winner of that last-four match-up in Saturday’s final. Emma Raducanu's Comeback Meanwhile, Emma Raducanu will make her comeback from illness at the Internationaux de Strasbourg next week. The British No 1 has not played a tournament since Indian Wells in March because of a post-viral illness after she first fell unwell in February, pulling out of four successive events. Road to the French Open Raducanu travelled to Rome and practised ahead of the current Italian Open but ultimately decided she was not quite ready to return. Taking a wild card into Strasbourg means the 23-year-old will gain valuable time on the clay ahead of the French Open, which begins on May 24.
#Iga Swiatek #Jessica Pegula #Italian Open
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Business May 13, 2026

Intertek backs EQT’s £10.6bn takeover bid

Intertek’s board has signaled it will recommend a £10.6 bn offer from Swedish private‑equity firm E…
Laboratory testing group Intertek has signaled its intention to recommend a £10.6 bn takeover offer from Swedish private‑equity firm EQT, valuing the business at £60 a share.Intertek backs EQT’s £10.6bn buyout proposalThe board, after rejecting three earlier approaches, said it is “minded to recommend” the latest bid, pending a firm offer. The proposal comes from EQT, a firm owned by Sweden’s billionaire Wallenberg family.Valuation and share‑price reaction to the £10.6bn offerThe deal totals £10.6bn including debt (or £9.4bn net). Earlier bids were priced at £58, £54 and £51 per share. On announcement, Intertek shares rose almost 7% to £56.65.Strategic implications for the FTSE 100 and testing sectorIntertek joins a wave of FTSE 100 takeovers this year, alongside Beazley and Schroders. With 45,000 employees and over 1,000 labs, the company is evaluating a possible split of its energy‑infrastructure division (£1.6bn revenue) from its product‑testing arm (£1.9bn revenue). The Wallenberg‑backed EQT brings a philosophy of “more than capital” to the deal.Outlook: What EQT’s acquisition could mean for Intertek’s futureIf shareholders approve, EQT may pursue operational synergies and possibly a demerger of the energy segment. Activist investor pressure, exemplified by Matt Peltz of Lost Coast Collective, suggests the market expects a higher valuation, but the agreed price could set a benchmark for future private‑equity activity in the testing industry.
#Intertek #EQT #Wallenberg family
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Politics May 13, 2026

Maldives jails two journalists for reporting on president's alleged affair

Two journalists in the Maldives have been jailed for reporting on an alleged affair involving Presi…
The Lead Two journalists in the Maldives have been jailed for reporting on an alleged affair involving President Mohamed Muizzu. The journalists, Mohamed Shahzan and Leevan Ali Nasir, were sentenced to 15 and 10 days in jail respectively for violating a gag order. The Event Details The case centres on a documentary titled Aisha, which was released on Adhadhu's social media accounts on March 28. It featured an anonymised interview with a woman who claimed to have had a sexual relationship with Muizzu, 47, a married father of three. Muizzu has dismissed the allegations as 'baseless lies'. The documentary was released days before a constitutional referendum that delivered a stinging midterm rebuke to Muizzu, with 69 percent of voters rejecting a government proposal on April 4 to align the presidential and parliamentary election cycles. The Data Analysis The journalists, who work for the news website Adhadhu, were sentenced by the criminal court in the Maldivian capital, Male, on Tuesday. Shahzan received 15 days in jail and Nasir 10 days. The Impact Analysis The case has intensified concerns about democracy and media freedom in the Maldives, a Sunni Muslim nation whose luxury resorts attract tourists from around the world. Parliament passed a media law in September giving a commission stacked with government loyalists powers to fine, suspend and shut down outlets while Muizzu's allies overhauled the Supreme Court last year, removing three judges in moves the former judges said were politically motivated. The Prediction News media freedom groups, opposition leaders and legal experts have disagreed with the government's actions, calling for the release of the journalists and an end to judicial harassment of their news outlet. The Maldives Journalists Association called the sentences 'unprecedented in the Maldives's democratic history' and argued that the court's gag order failed the constitutional tests of legality, necessity and proportionality.
#Maldives #Mohamed Muizzu #Adhadhu
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