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Netanyahu stands by Gaza plans amid heavy criticism of Israel at UN Security Council

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UN ambassadors have condemned Israel’s plans to “take control” of Gaza City as Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu insisted it was the “best way” to end the war.

During a press conference, which Netanyahu said was intended to “puncture the lies”, the Israeli leader said the planned offensive would move “fairly quickly” and would “free Gaza from Hamas”.

He also claimed Israeli hostages held in Gaza were “the only ones being deliberately starved” and denied Israel was starving Gazans.

Meanwhile, Israel came under heavy criticism at an emergency meeting of the United Nations (UN) Security Council, with the UK, France and others warning the plan risked “violating international humanitarian law”.

Along with Denmark, Greece and Slovenia, they called for the plan to be reversed, adding it would “do nothing to secure the return of hostages and risks further endangering their lives”.

Other council members expressed similar alarm. China called the “collective punishment” of people in Gaza unacceptable, while Russia warned against a “reckless intensification of hostilities”.

UN Assistant Secretary General Miroslav Jenca told the meeting: “If these plans are implemented, they will likely trigger another calamity in Gaza, reverberating across the region and causing further forced displacement, killings, and destruction.”

But the United States defended Israel, with Ambassador Dorothy Shea telling the meeting the US had been working “tirelessly” to free hostages and end the war, and the meeting undermined those efforts.

She added the war “could end today if Hamas let the hostages go”, and accused other UN members of taking advantage of the meeting to “accuse Israel of genocide”, an allegation she insisted was “demonstrably false”.

Thousands of protesters have also taken to the streets across Israel to oppose Israel’s plan, fearing it puts the lives of hostages at risk.

In his presser, Netanyahu said the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) had been instructed to dismantle the “two remaining Hamas strongholds” in Gaza City and a central area around al-Mawasi.

He also outlined a three-step plan to increase aid in Gaza, including designating safe corridors for humanitarian aid distribution and more air drops by Israeli forces and other partners.

It would also include increasing the number of safe distribution points managed by the controversial US and Israeli-backed Gazan Humanitarian Foundation (GHF).

The UN reported earlier this month that 1,373 Palestinians had been killed seeking food since late May, when GHF set up aid distribution sites.

Netanyahu claimed Hamas had “violently looted the aid trucks”, and, when asked about Palestinians killed at GHF sites, said “a lot of firing was done by Hamas”.

Watch: Palestinian and Israeli representatives address UN Security Council meeting

Asked about the remaining Israeli hostages in Gaza – 20 of whom are still thought to be alive – Netanyahu said “if we don’t do anything, we are not going to get them out”.

The Israeli leader also took aim at the international press, saying it had bought into Hamas propaganda. He labelled some of the photos of malnourished children in Gaza that have run on newspaper front pages across the world as “fake”.

Throughout the war, Israel has not allowed international journalists into Gaza to report freely. But Netanyahu said a directive telling the military to bring in foreign journalists had been in place for two days.

Since Saturday, five people have died as a result of starvation and malnutrition in Gaza, bringing the total number to 217 deaths, according to the Hamas-run health ministry.

It also said that in total more than 61,000 people have been killed as a result of Israel’s military campaign since 2023.

Israel launched its offensive in response to the Hamas-led attack on southern Israel on 7 October that year, in which about 1,200 people were killed and 251 others were taken hostage.

In the past, figures from the Hamas-run health ministry were widely used in times of conflict and seen as reliable by the UN and other international organisations.

Trump orders immediate removal of homeless people from Washington, DC, with offered alternative accommodations outside the capital

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President Donald Trump said Sunday that homeless people must be moved “far” from Washington, after days of musing about taking federal control of the US capital where he has falsely suggested crime is rising.

The Republican billionaire has announced a press conference for Monday in which he is expected to reveal his plans for Washington — which is run by the locally elected government of the District of Columbia under congressional oversight.

It is an arrangement Trump has long publicly chafed at. He has threatened to federalize the city and give the White House the final say in how it is run.

“I’m going to make our Capital safer and more beautiful than it ever was before,” the president posted on his Truth Social platform Sunday.

“The Homeless have to move out, IMMEDIATELY. We will give you places to stay, but FAR from the Capital,” he continued, adding that criminals in the city would be swiftly imprisoned.

“It’s all going to happen very fast,” he said.

Washington is ranked 15th on a list of major US cities by homeless population, according to government statistics from last year.

While thousands of people spend each night in shelters or on the streets, the figure are down from pre-pandemic levels.

Earlier this week Trump also threatened to deploy the National Guard as part of a crackdown on what he falsely says is rising crime in Washington.

Violent crime in the capital fell in the first half of 2025 by 26 percent compared with a year earlier, police statistics show.

The city’s crime rates in 2024 were already their lowest in three decades, according to figures produced by the Justice Department before Trump took office.

“We are not experiencing a crime spike,” Washington Mayor Muriel Bowser said Sunday on MSNBC.

While the mayor, a Democrat, was not critical of Trump in her remarks, she said “any comparison to a war torn country is hyperbolic and false.”

Trump’s threat to send in the National Guard comes weeks after he deployed California’s military reserve force into Los Angeles to quell protests over immigration raids, despite objections from local leaders and law enforcement.

The president has frequently mused about using the military to control America’s cities, many of which are under Democratic control and hostile to his nationalist impulses.

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Israel’s Strategy: Suppress the Palestinians and Dominate the Region? | Israel-Palestine Conflict

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Has Israel created a predicament it can’t escape with its zero-sum path for the Palestinians and regional overreach?

By offering nothing except continual massacre for the Palestinians, and attempting to subjugate the surrounding areas to its will, Israel finds itself “in a predicament of its own making”, argues former Israeli adviser Daniel Levy.

Levy, president of the US/Middle East Project, tells host Steve Clemons that Israel has put Arab leaders in a bind, as regional disgust grows towards Israel for its war crimes in Gaza.

And while Western governments and cultural institutions have been carrying water for Israel for decades, argues Levy, some have begun “acknowledging things they worked hard not to acknowledge for an awfully long time.”

Sony’s recorded music and publishing revenue reached $2.77 billion in calendar Q2 2025, marking an 8.8% increase year-over-year.

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Sony’s global music rights operation – across recorded music and music publishing – generated USD $2.768 billion in the three months to end of June 2025.

That’s according to MBW’s calculations based on Sony Group Corp’s calendar Q2 2025 (fiscal Q1 2025) results, as announced by the Japanese firm today.

The $2.768 billion figure was up by 8.8% year-on-year (vs. calendar Q2 2024) at US dollar-converted consistent currency.

In monetary terms, Sony’s overall music rights operation (recorded music plus music publishing) generated approximately $223 million more in calendar Q2 2025 than in the prior-year quarter.



(Our regular note: MBW’s calculations of Sony’s music earnings – explained at the bottom of this story – are based on average quarterly exchange rates, provided by Sony, from its reported Yen to USD. We believe this gives a more accurate picture of Sony’s worldwide results than its reported Yen figures. This is because Sony Music Entertainment and Sony Music Publishing both aggregate the results of their worldwide subsidiaries on a USD basis. However, this global USD conversion system still risks a certain amount of FX distortion by converting revenues from Tokyo-based Sony Music Entertainment Japan – which would usually report revenues in its ‘root’ currency of Yen – into USD.)

Recorded music revenue breakdown

Sony’s global recorded music operation generated USD $2.09 billion in calendar Q2 2025, up 8.4% YoY versus the equivalent quarterly period of the prior year on a USD basis.

Within Sony’s calendar Q2 2025 global recorded music result, streaming generated USD $1.36 billion (on a USD-converted basis), up 7.3% YoY.

(This ‘streaming’ number combines both subscription and ad-funded streaming revenues generated by Sony’s global recorded music operation.)

Quarterly revenues from physical music sales in calendar Q2 2025 hit USD $180 million (up 19.0% YoY).

Sony’s ‘Other’ category within recorded music generated $481 million in calendar Q2 2025, up 3.1% YoY versus the prior-year quarter.

This latter category (‘Other’) includes license revenue (public performance, broadcast and sync), merchandising, and live performance income.

The solid performance across all categories contributed to the overall growth in recorded music revenues, with streaming remaining the largest revenue driver.


According to Sony Corp‘s results, Sony Music Entertainment’s ten biggest recorded music projects in the calendar Q2 2025 quarter (ex-artists signed in Japan), in order of global revenue generation, were:

  1. Bad Bunny (Rimas Entertainment) – DeBÍ TiRAR MáS FOToS
  2. SZASOS
  3. Sleep TokenEven in Arcadia
  4. Tate McRaeSo Close to What
  5. Bad Bunny (Rimas Entertainment) – Un Verano Sin Ti
  6. Pink FloydPink Floyd at Pompeii – MCMLXXII
  7. ATEEZGOLDEN HOUR : Part.3
  8. Bruce SpringsteenTracks II: The Lost Albums
  9. JENNIERuby
  10. Miley CyrusSomething Beautiful

Music publishing performance

Sony’s global music publishing operation – led by Sony Music Publishing – generated USD $683 million in the three months to end of June 2025.

That quarterly revenue figure, at the US dollar level, was up 9.9% year-on-year.

Based on Sony’s reported streaming growth rates, Sony’s global music publishing operation derived approximately $392 million of its quarterly revenues in the calendar Q2 2025 period from streaming.

That publishing streaming figure was up 8.0% year-on-year.


Quarterly profits

Sony Corp also today issued some profit numbers for its corporate Music division in the three months to end of June 2025. (The following figures include Sony’s operations across Recorded Music, Music Publishing plus Visual Media & Platform.)

In calendar Q2 2025 (fiscal Q1 2025), Sony’s corporate Music division posted a quarterly operating income of 92.8 billion Yen (USD $642m).

That represented an operating margin of 19.9%, from total divisional quarterly revenues (again, ‘Music’ including ‘Visual Media & Platform’) of 465.3 billion Yen (USD $3.22bn).

Sony Corp additionally presents to investors its Adjusted OIBDA performance in each quarter (see below) – a metric also used by Warner Music Group to present its earnings.

In calendar Q2 2025 (fiscal Q1 2025), Sony’s Music division posted an Adjusted OIBDA of 117.1 billion Yen (USD $810m).

That represented an Adjusted OIBDA margin from total divisional quarterly revenues of 25.2%.



Methodology note

Note: All YoY percentage rises/falls published in this story are calculated at constant currency at the US dollar-converted level.

MBW uses Sony’s own quarterly average currency rates for these calculations, and the below data from Sony’s filings.



For this analysis, MBW has calculated Sony’s financials from Japanese Yen into US dollars at the following prevailing exchange rates in each quarter, as provided by Sony Corp:

  • Calendar Q1 2023: 135.4 Yen per USD
  • Calendar Q2 2023: 137.0 Yen per USD
  • Calendar Q3 2023: 144.4 Yen per USD
  • Calendar Q4 2023: 147.9 Yen per USD
  • Calendar Q1 2024: 148.2 Yen per USD
  • Calendar Q2 2024: 155.6 Yen per USD
  • Calendar Q3 2024: 149.5 Yen per USD
  • Calendar Q4 2024: 152.2 Yen per USD
  • Calendar Q1 2025: 152.6 Yen per USD
  • Calendar Q2 2025: 144.6 Yen per USD

By applying these exchange figures to each applicable period, we effectively get a US-leaning constant currency picture of Sony Music’s performance.

This isn’t a perfect system; it risks overplaying Sony Music Entertainment’s global business slightly by converting a chunk of revenues from Sony Music Entertainment Japan (which would usually be straight-reported in Yen) into US dollars.

But it provides us with a cleaner reflection of the performance of New York-based Sony Music Entertainment outside of FX distortion, because the company had to convert its US currency into Yen in the first place for Sony Corp’s results. The same is true for US-based Sony Music Publishing.

MBW believes this currency exchange system is the yardstick used internally at Sony Music Group‘s HQ in New York.

Sony’s own description of its three corporate music divisions is as follows:

  • Recorded Music – Streaming includes the distribution of digital recorded music by streaming; Recorded Music – Others includes the distribution of recorded music by physical media and digital download as well as revenue derived from artists’ live performances;
  • Music Publishing includes the management and licensing of the words and music of songs;
  • Visual Media and Platform includes the production and distribution of animation titles, including game applications based on the animation titles, and various service offerings for music and visual products.

Within / covering the first two divisions listed above:

  • Sony Music Publishing, run by CEO & Chairman Jon Platt, is Sony’s US-headquartered music publishing operation. Sony Music Entertainment, run by CEO Rob Stringer, is Sony’s US-headquartered recorded music operation.
  • And Sony Music Group – also run by Rob Stringer, as Chairman – is Sony’s US-headquartered umbrella group for both Sony Music Entertainment and Sony Music Publishing.

Music Business Worldwide

Willy Chavarria expresses regret following cultural appropriation controversy with Adidas shoe

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Jennifer Meierhans

Business reporter

Getty Images Willy Chavarria on a red carpet with photographers all around wearing a black hat, sunglasses and a pale pink tuxedo with exaggeratedly large lapels and holding three red rosesGetty Images

US fashion designer Willy Chavarria at The Mark Hotel before the 2025 Met Gala

US fashion designer Willy Chavarria has apologised after a shoe he created in collaboration with Adidas Originals was criticised for “cultural appropriation”.

The Oaxaca Slip-On was inspired by traditional leather sandals known as huaraches made by Indigenous artisans in Mexico.

The Mexican president was among those who spoke out against the footwear, which was reportedly made in China without consultation or credit to the communities who originated the design.

Chavarria said in a statement sent to the BBC: “I am deeply sorry that the shoe was appropriated in this design and not developed in direct and meaningful partnership with the Oaxacan community.” The BBC has contacted Adidas for comment.

Cultural appropriation is defined as “the unacknowledged or inappropriate adoption of the customs, practices, ideas, of one people or society by members of a typically more dominant people or society”.

Mexico’s President Claudia Sheinbaum told a press conference: “Big companies often take products, ideas and designs from Indigenous communities.”

She added: “We are looking at the legal part to be able to support them.”

Adidas had contacted Oaxacan officials to discuss “restitution to the people who were plagiarised”, Mexico’s deputy culture minister Marina Nunez added.

Jesús Méndez/EPA/Shutterstock Traditional huaraches are displayed at a market in Oaxaca, MexicoJesús Méndez/EPA/Shutterstock

Traditional huaraches displayed at a market in Oaxaca, Mexico

Promotional images of the black moulded open-toe footwear have been taken down from the brand’s social media accounts as well as Chavarria’s.

In his statement, Chavarria said he wanted “to speak from the heart about the Oaxaca slip-on I created with Adidas”.

“The intention was always to honor the powerful cultural and artistic spirit of Oaxaca and its creative communities – a place whose beauty and resistance have inspired me. The name Oaxaca is not just a word – its living culture, its people, and its history.”

He went on to say he was “deeply sorry” he did not work with the Oaxacan community on the design.

“This falls short of the respect and collaborative approach that Oaxaca, the Zapotec community of Villa Hidalgo Yalalag, and its people deserve,” he added.

“I know love is not just given – it is earned through action.”

Chavarria was Calvin Klein’s senior vice president of design until 2024 and is the founder and chief creative officer of his eponymous label.

Adidas has not responded to the BBC’s request for a comment.

The Associated Press reported that Adidas responded to Mexican authorities in a letter on Friday.

The company reportedly said it “deeply values the cultural wealth of Mexico’s Indigenous people and recognises the relevance” of criticisms, and requested a sit-down to talk about how to “repair the damage” to Indigenous communities.

Israel’s finance minister warns that Benjamin Netanyahu’s Gaza war plan is destined to fail.

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Israeli finance minister Bezalel Smotrich said he has “lost faith” that Benjamin Netanyahu can achieve a “decisive victory” in Gaza, days after the country’s security cabinet agreed to expand the military offensive in the shattered enclave.

Smotrich, an ultranationalist and key member of the governing coalition, accused Netanyahu of conducting an “about-face” after having promised this time to “go all the way”, and criticised the premier for leaving open the possibility of a ceasefire-for-hostage deal with Palestinian militant group Hamas, in a blistering three-minute video on Saturday.

Smotrich said he had remained in government “as long as I believed we were driving for decisive victory”, but that he had now “lost faith that the prime minister can and wishes to lead the [Israeli military] there.”

The veteran premier has come under pressure from his far-right allies, including Smotrich and national security minister Itamar Ben-Gvir, for more hardline policies throughout the Gaza war. While the statements on Sunday were the most expansive to date by the finance minister, he did not explicitly threaten to resign or bring down Netanyahu’s government.

While Smotrich has attempted to outflank Netanyahu from the right, the premier’s decision to expand the offensive against Hamas in Gaza has been heavily criticised as reckless both at home and abroad.

Netanyahu’s security cabinet ordered the Israeli military to begin preparations to “take control of Gaza City” after a marathon session that lasted into Friday morning. The cabinet suggested that civilians sheltering in what was once the enclave’s largest population centre would be forced to evacuate.

Yet the expanded military offensive could be delayed until early October to allow time to call up reserves, forcibly evacuate hundreds of thousands of Palestinians, and create the required humanitarian aid infrastructure.

Smotrich, who took part in the deliberations, said the plan amounted to “launching a military operation that is not aimed at resolving the issue, but rather at putting pressure on Hamas to agree to a partial hostage deal”.

‘‘That’s not how you win a war,” Smotrich added, highlighting an aggressive alternative plan — which he did not describe in detail — he claimed would lead to “a lightning-fast military victory”.

Smotrich and his far-right allies have publicly supported the full reoccupation of the entire Gaza Strip, the “voluntary emigration” of the territory’s 2mn people to undefined foreign countries, and the re-establishment of Israeli settlements across the enclave.

Zvi Sukkot, a parliamentarian from Smotrich’s Religious Zionism party, told Israel’s army radio on Sunday morning that the party could reconsider its membership in Netanyahu’s government and push for early elections.

“I don’t see any point being partner to something that will ultimately send soldiers [into battle] without first knowing what the end result will be,” Sukkot said.

Netanyahu’s governing coalition consists of the premier’s Likud party, two far-right parties, and two ultra-Orthodox factions, which have already suspended their involvement in government due to differences over conscription.

Despite the coalition troubles, political analysts remain sceptical that snap elections are likely in the coming months. The governing coalition is trailing the opposition in the polls, with Religious Zionism in danger of not passing the electoral threshold for entry into the next parliament. Elections are not formally meant to be held until the autumn of 2026.

The country’s military chiefs opposed Netanyahu’s plan due to fears that it would overstretch an already exhausted fighting force after 22 months of war and endanger the remaining 50 Israeli hostages held by Hamas, 20 of whom are still believed to be alive.

Opposition leaders emphasised the toll that expanding the war would have on Israel’s international standing, as well as the cost for the Israeli taxpayer.

Opposition leader Yair Lapid warned on Sunday that ‘‘delusions of conquering the strip’’ would result in new taxes, cuts in social welfare spending and higher debt service.

“Instead of improving education for Israel’s children — we will pay for the education of Gaza’s children,’’ Lapid said on X.

Nine western states — including the UK, Germany and France — rejected the Israeli security cabinet’s decision in a joint statement with the EU on Saturday, warning that it risked aggravating the “catastrophic humanitarian situation” in Gaza and endangering the Israeli hostages, and could violate international law.

Female staff in Afghanistan of UN report receiving death threats, says Women’s Rights News

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Taliban rulers say they are not behind the threats and are investigating, according to the United Nations.

Explicit death threats have been made against dozens of Afghan women working for the United Nations in Afghanistan, according to a new UN report, where their rights have been severely curtailed since the Taliban returned to power in 2021.

The UN mission to the country said female national staff were subjected to direct death threats in May, in the latest update on the human rights situation in Afghanistan published on Sunday.

The report says the Taliban told the UN mission that their cadres were not responsible for the threats, and an Interior Ministry investigation is under way.

The threats came from unidentified individuals related to their work with the UN Assistance Mission in Afghanistan, or UNAMA, other agencies, funds, and programmes, “requiring the U.N. to implement interim measures to protect their safety”, according to the report.

Afghan authorities, including the Taliban Interior Ministry, didn’t immediately respond to requests for comment on the report or the investigation, according to The Associated Press news agency.

The Taliban barred Afghan women from working at domestic and foreign nongovernmental organisations in December 2022, extending this ban to the UN six months later. They then threatened to shut down agencies and groups still employing women. Aid agencies and NGOs say the Taliban have disrupted or interfered with their operations, allegations denied by authorities.

The UN report is the first official confirmation of death threats against Afghan women working in the sector. The report also highlighted other areas affecting women’s personal freedoms and safety, including inspectors from the Vice and Virtue Ministry requiring women to wear a chador, a full-body cloak covering the head. Women have been arrested for only wearing the hijab.

Women have also been denied access to public areas, in line with laws banning them from such spaces.

A UN report from August 2024 found that Afghanistan’s Taliban government has “deliberately deprived” at least 1.4 million girls of their right to an education during its three years in power.

About 300,000 more girls are missing out on school since UNESCO last carried out a count in April 2023, it said on Thursday, warning that “the future of an entire generation is now in jeopardy.”

ICC targets Taliban for persecution of women

The International Criminal Court (ICC) issued arrest warrants in July for two top Taliban leaders in Afghanistan on charges of abuses against women and girls.

ICC judges said at the time there were “reasonable grounds” to suspect Taliban Supreme Leader Haibatullah Akhunzada and Chief Justice Abdul Hakim Haqqani of committing gender-based persecution.

“While the Taliban have imposed certain rules and prohibitions on the population as a whole, they have specifically targeted girls and women by reason of their gender, depriving them of fundamental rights and freedoms,” the court said in a statement in July.

The Taliban has “severely deprived” girls and women of the rights to education, privacy, family life and the freedoms of movement, expression, thought, conscience and religion, ICC judges said.

The Taliban has rejected the ICC warrants as “baseless rhetoric”, saying it does not recognise the ICC’s authority, and underlined the court’s failure to protect the “hundreds of women and children being killed daily” in Gaza.

Growing demands for Israel to abandon proposed Gaza offensive plans

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Israel faces growing calls to scrap new Gaza offensive plans

Jack Haidl, Michigan State Finalist, to Attend Wheaton College (Illinois) in the Fall

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By Claire Wong on SwimSwam

Fitter and Faster Swim Camps is the proud sponsor of SwimSwam’s College Recruiting Channel and all commitment news. For many, swimming in college is a lifelong dream that is pursued with dedication and determination. Fitter and Faster is proud to honor these athletes and those who supported them on their journey.

Saline Swim Team’s Jack Haidl, a Dexter, Michigan native will join the Wheaton College Thunder this fall. Haidl, a Dexter High School graduate, is a distance free specialist.

I would like to announce my commitment to Wheaton College for the next phase of my academic, swimming and spiritual journey!  I am so thankful for the support from my high school and club team coaches and teammates.  Also a huge thanks to Coach Ayers and the Wheaton family, and my family for the amazing support so far. I am very excited to begin the next phase of my life at Wheaton!

Haidl helped Dexter to a 10th place finish—in a field of 46 teams—at the Michigan Boys Division 2 State Championships to wrap up his high school swimming career. His 12 individual points was the 2nd most of his team, and all 12 were via his 7th place finish in the 500 free. He swam a 4:43.52, the second fastest time of his career and just off the 4:42.18 he swam in prelims to snag his first sectional cut. Haidl also swam the 200 free (1:47.00), finishing in 19th, and contributed a split of 49.23 in Dexter’s 400 free relay to help them finish 10th overall. 

Just a week later, Haidl carried his momentum at the Michigan Ultra Championships, swimming a 9:47.25 in the 1000 free to shave nearly 20 seconds from his previous best of 10:06.64.

At Speedo Sectionals – Columbus (LCM) in July, Haidl hit best times in every event he swam; his highest finish came in the 400 free, where he took 29th in 4:18.38. Though off his prelim swim of 4:17.29, both swims were significantly under his previous best of 4:25.03. Haidl also competed in the 200 free (2:03.08) and 800 free (8:53.76), coming in 85th and 18th, respectively. Haidl went on to time trial the 100 free, touching the wall in 57.59 to set yet another personal best.

Best times (SCY):

  • 100 free – 50.22
  • 200 free – 1:47.00
  • 500 free – 4:42.18
  • 1000 free – 9:47.25
  • 1650 free – 17:20.44

Wheaton College, a D3 school, is located in Wheaton, Illinois and a member of the College Conference of Illinois and Wisconsin (CCIW). At the 2025 CCIW Championships, Wheaton finished in 3rd, and distance/IM specialist Jed Ritchie, a rising sophomore, led the team with 57 points. Haidl would’ve been 3rd on Wheaton’s roster in both the 500 and 1000 free this past year, behind the aforementioned Ritchie and Isaac Eilmes, a rising junior. 

His commitment strengthens Wheaton’s already-strong mid-distance group, as Haidl’s best time in the 500 would have placed 6th at the CCIW Championships this past season—an event Wheaton already had 3 A-finalists in. Further, Haidl would have scored in both the 200 free and 1650 free.

Joining Haidl this fall is a breaststroke-heavy freshman class, featuring Nick John (breast), Solomon Berg (breast), Peyton Truman (breast), and  Zak Kohoutek (sprint free).

If you have a commitment to report, please send an email with a photo (landscape, or horizontal, looks best) and a quote to Recruits@swimswam.com.      

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Read the full story on SwimSwam: Michigan State Finalist Jack Haidl to Join Wheaton College (Illinois) This Fall

Honey’s Ancient Secrets Unveiled by Ancient Greek Shrine

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Back in 1954, archaeologists uncovered a hidden shrine deep beneath a Greek settlement in Paestum (southern Italy). Inside, they found bronze jars arranged around an iron bed. The jars held a waxy, scented paste that hinted at something ancient and once fluid. Sealed with cork and marked with traces on their surfaces, the vessels held a sticky secret.

Curious minds at London’s Bee Research Association asked a German lab to investigate. The residue didn’t dissolve in water, but other solvents revealed a fatty, wax-like substance. Bits of plants, insects, and pollen showed up too, though researchers chalked that up to contamination. Some believed the waxy top layer had been added later, masking the original contents within.

By 1970, curiosity still lingered over the strange waxy paste found in these ancient jars from Paestum. Scientists at Rome’s Central Restoration Institute ran solubility tests and found no traces of sugars or proteins, just fatty substances like waxes and resins. A sticky puzzle indeed.

Fast forward to 1983, and another lab took up the mystery. This time, analysts from the Rome Chamber of Commerce confirmed that the paste wasn’t water-soluble and held no sugary or starchy clues.

What did they find? Remnants of animal or plant fats and phospholipids, ingredients that hinted at something once organic, maybe even ritualistic.

In 2019, the mysterious residue from the Paestum shrine made its way to the Ashmolean Museum for the Last Supper in Pompeii exhibition. This wasn’t just a display; it was an opportunity for more scientific investigation. With access to cutting-edge tools and fresh curiosity, researchers seized the chance to reanalyze the substance’s biomolecular makeup.

After decades of speculation, Oxford researchers took yet another look at the 2500-year-old waxy residue and struck archaeological gold. Using modern techniques like mass spectrometry and small molecule compositional analysis, they uncovered biomolecular proof that the mysterious substance was once honey, likely in its original honeycomb form.

They also detected sugars, organic acids, and royal jelly proteins in the molecular makeup of the residue. This chemical signature is nearly identical to today’s beeswax and eerily similar to modern honey. It’s a scientific triumph where ancient ritual meets cutting-edge chemistry.

The team didn’t just scrape the surface; they dissected it layer by layer. Using several approaches helped them identify a comprehensive picture of the residue’s molecular composition. This enabled them to pinpoint what was ancient, what was contamination, and what had broken down over centuries.

The surface analysis made using X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy revealed traces of copper corrosion tightly bonded with the residue.

The twist? Copper is naturally antimicrobial, and its presence likely kept the sugar molecules safe from decay – as if nature gave the residue a protective armor.

“In preparation for the exhibition ‘Last Supper in Pompeii’ at the Ashmolean Museum in 2019, our colleagues at the Archaeological Park of Paestum and Veila generously made several important and high-profile loans, including a Greek bronze hydria from the Heroon and its organic contents,” explained Kelly Domoney, Heritage Science Manager at the Ashmolean Museum. “We were permitted a unique opportunity to re-analyze those contents using modern instrumentation at the University.”

During the exhibition, researchers gave 37 other historical artefacts a modern-science-powered makeover. Using microscopy and X-radiography, they looked beyond the surface, and what they uncovered was a treasure trove of stories hidden in soot and limescale.

They found burn marks on the undersides of some vessels. This hinted at their use over open hearths for cooking. Thick limescale inside others revealed they were likely used to boil water, functioning as ancient kettles.

The team didn’t just study artefacts, they also resurrected the rituals and routines of past lives, proving that museum shelves hold more than dusty relics. They’re silent storytellers waiting to be decoded.

Researchers believe that this work will inspire further re-analysis of legacy materials, especially those held in museum collections where sampling is limited and earlier tests proved inconclusive.

The study was published in the Journal of the American Chemical Society.

Source: University of Oxford