Severe rains caused flooding and landslides in Beijing and surrounding areas, leaving homes destroyed as mass evacuations were underway.
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Video: Israeli settler murders activist featured in Oscar-winning film | War Crimes
Activist, football player and participant in Oscar-winning film Odeh Hadalin was shot in the chest and killed by an Israeli settler, in the Occupied West Bank. The shooter, Yinon Levi, has been under sanctions by both the EU and the US.
Published On 29 Jul 2025
Live Recap of Day 3 Finals at the 2025 World Championships
By James Sutherland on SwimSwam
2025 World Championships
- July 27 – August 3, 2025 (pool swimming)
- Singapore, Singapore
- World Aquatics Championships Arena
- LCM (50m)
- Meet Central
- How To Watch
- SwimSwam Preview Index
- Entry Book
- Live Results
- Live Recaps
DAY 3 FINALS HEAT SHEET
Order Of Events:
- Men’s 200 freestyle final
- Women’s 1500 freestyle final
- Men’s 50 breaststroke semi-finals
- Women’s 100 backstroke final
- Men’s 100 backstroke final
- Women’s 200 freestyle semi-finals
- Men’s 200 butterfly semi-finals
- Women’s 100 breaststroke final
The third night of finals from the 2025 World Championships is set to get underway in Singapore with medals on the line in five events, plus semi-final rounds in three more.
The men’s 200 freestyle final promises to be a barn-burner with David Popovici and Luke Hobson set to go head-to-head, while Katie Ledecky aims to win her sixth world title in the women’s 1500 freestyle, with those events being the first two on the docket.
Then we’ll see the 100 back final for both genders, highlighted by Kaylee McKeown versus Regan Smith in the women’s event and a wide open battle for the men, and then things will close with the women’s 100 breaststroke final where American Kate Douglass leads the field out of the semis while China’s Tang Qianting is the favorite on paper and the defending champion.
We’ll also see semis in the men’s 50 breast, the women’s 200 free and the men’s 200 fly.
MEN’S 200 FREESTYLE – FINAL
- World Record: 1:42.00 – Paul Biedermann, GER (2009)
- World Junior Record: 1:42.97 – David Popovici, ROU (2022)
- Championship Record: 1:42.00 – Paul Biedermann, GER (2009)
- 2023 World Champion: Matt Richards, GBR – 1:44.30
- 2024 Olympic Champion: David Popovici, ROU – 1:44.72
WOMEN’S 1500 FREESTYLE – FINAL
- World Record: 15:20.48 – Katie Ledecky, USA (2018)
- World Junior Record: 15:28.36 – Katie Ledecky, USA (2014)
- Championship Record: 15:25.48 – Katie Ledecky, USA (2015)
- 2023 World Champion: Katie Ledecky, USA – 15:26.27
- 2024 Olympic Champion: Katie Ledecky, USA – 15:30.02
MEN’S 50 BREASTSTROKE – SEMI-FINALS
- World Record: 25.95 – Adam Peaty, GBR (2017)
- World Junior Record: 26.97 – Nicolo Martinenghi, ITA (2017)
- Championship Record: 25.95 – Adam Peaty, GBR (2017)
- 2023 World Champion: Qin Haiyang, CHN – 26.29
WOMEN’S 100 BACKSTROKE – FINAL
- World Record: 57.13 – Regan Smith, USA (2024)
- World Junior Record: 57.57 – Regan Smith, USA (2019)
- Championship Record: 57.53 – Kaylee McKeown, AUS (2023)
- 2023 World Champion: Kaylee McKeown, AUS – 57.53
- 2024 Olympic Champion: Kaylee McKeown, AUS – 57.33
MEN’S 100 BACKSTROKE – FINAL
- World Record: 51.60 – Thomas Ceccon, Italy (2022)
- World Junior Record: 52.08 – Miron Lifintsev, Russia (2024)
- Championship Record: 51.60 – Thomas Ceccon, Italy (2022)
- 2023 World Champion: Ryan Murphy, United States – 52.22
- 2024 Olympic Champion: Thomas Ceccon, Italy – 52.00
WOMEN’S 200 FREESTYLE – SEMI-FINALS
- World Record: 1:52.23 – Ariarne Titmus, AUS (2024)
- World Junior Record: 1:53.65 – Summer McIntosh, CAN (2023)
- Championship Record: Mollie O’Callaghan, AUS – 1:52.85
- 2023 World Champion: Mollie O’Callaghan, AUS – 1:52.85
- 2024 Olympic Champion: Mollie O’Callaghan, AUS – 1:53.27
MEN’S 200 BUTTERFLY – SEMI-FINALS
- World Record: 1:50.34 – Kristof Milak, HUN (2022)
- World Junior Record: 1:53.79 – Kristof Milak, HUN (2017)
- Championship Record: 1:50.34 – Kristof Milak, HUN (2022)
- 2023 World Champion: Leon Marchand, FRA – 1:52.43
- 2024 Olympic Champion: Leon Marchand, FRA – 1:51.21
WOMEN’S 100 BREASTSTROKE – FINAL
- World Record: 1:04.13 – Lilly King, USA (2017)
- World Junior Record: 1:04.35 – Ruta Meilutyte, LTU (2013)
- Championship Record: 1:04.13 – Lilly King, USA(2017)
- 2023 World Champion: Ruta Meilutyte, LTU – 1:04.62
- 2024 Olympic Champion: Tatjana Schoenmaker, RSA – 1:05.28
Read the full story on SwimSwam: 2025 World Championships: Day 3 Finals Live Recap
AstraZeneca’s shares rise following better-than-expected Q2 results; company maintains steady outlook
AstraZeneca shares gain after beating Q2 forecasts; outlook steady
Revolutionary New Titanium Alloys Enhance 3D Printing Capabilities
Apparently, folks in the material science world are totally over the fact that we’re able to 3D print titanium alloys willy-nilly.
Because they have exceptional strength-to-weight ratios, corrosion resistance, and biocompatibility, titanium alloys are used to make aircraft frames, jet engine parts, hip and knee replacements, dental implants, ship hulls, and golf clubs.
Ryan Brooke, an additive manufacturing researcher at Australia’s RMIT University, believes we can do way better. “3D printing allows faster, less wasteful and more tailorable production yet we’re still relying on legacy alloys like Ti-6Al-4V that doesn’t allow full capitalization of this potential,” he says. “It’s like we’ve created an airplane and are still just driving it around the streets.”
Ti-6Al-4V is also known as Titanium alloy 6-4 or grade 5 titanium, and is a combination of aluminum and vanadium. It’s strong, rigid, and highly fatigue resistant. However, 3D-printed Ti-6Al-4V has a propensity for columnar grains, which means that parts made from this material can be strong in one direction but weak or inconsistent in others – and therefore may need alloying with other elements to correct this.
To be fair, Brooke is putting his money where his mouth is. He’s authored a paper that appeared in Nature this month on a new approach to finding a reliable way to predict the grain structure of metals made using additive manufacturing, and thereby guide the design of new high-performance alloys we can 3D print.
The researchers’ approach, which has been in the works for the last three years, evaluated three key parameters in predicting the grain structure of alloys to determine whether an additive manufacturing recipe would yield a good alloy:
- Non-equilibrium solidification range(ΔTs): the temperature range over which the metal solidifies under non-equilibrium conditions.
- Growth restriction factor (Q): the initial rate at which constitutional supercooling develops at the very beginning of solidification.
- Constitutional supercooling parameter (P): the overall potential for new grains to nucleate and grow throughout the solidification process, rather than just at the very beginning.
Through this work, the team experimentally verified that P is the most reliable parameter for guiding the selection of alloying elements in 3D-printed alloys to achieve desired grain structures for strength and durability.

Image courtesy of the researchers
This method, which uses a wealth of experimental data and computational tools, is said to save on time and costs in developing additively manufactured alloys by reducing the number of iterations and speeding up development cycles.
The team didn’t describe its own titanium alloy in the paper as it plans to commercialize it soon – but claims it’s 29% cheaper to produce than regular titanium. The researchers also noted that they “have been able to not only produce titanium alloys with a uniform grain structure, but with reduced costs, while also making it stronger and more ductile.”
That could make titanium alloy more accessible for the aforementioned applications across industries ranging from aerospace to healthcare, and potentially lower the costs of manufacturing and maintaining high-performance components.
Source: RMIT University
17 killed and dozens wounded as Russia attacks Ukrainian prison
A Russian airstrike on a prison in a frontline region in southeastern Ukraine has killed 17 people and wounded 42 others, according to Ukrainian officials.
The overnight attack in Zaporizhzhia also damaged surrounding homes, regional leader Ivan Fedorov said. Russian forces launched eight strikes using high-explosive aerial glide bombs, he added.
The Ukrainian president’s chief of staff, Andriy Yermak, condemned the strikes as “another war crime” committed by Russia.
Zaporizhzhia is one of four eastern regions in Ukraine that Russia claims to have annexed since 2022, although the region is largely under Ukrainian control.
Ukraine’s justice ministry said four bombs hit the Bilenke penitentiary, destroying the dining hall, administrative HQ and quarantine area and that all those killed and wounded were inmates.
Russian forces have frequently targeted Zaporizhzhia since the start of the full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022.
Ukraine’s human rights commissioner said attacking a prison was a gross violation of humanitarian law as people in detention did not lose their right to life and protection.
US President Donald Trump issued a stark ultimatum to Moscow Monday, warning that Russia had “about 10 or 12 days” to agree a ceasefire or face sweeping sanctions. Speaking during a visit to Scotland, Trump told reporters he would “announce it probably tonight or tomorrow,” adding, “there’s no reason to wait, if you know what the answer is”.
Earlier in July, Trump set a 50-day deadline for the Kremlin to reach a truce with Kyiv or risk economic penalties, but the warning has not halted Russia’s barrage of strikes.
There were further casualties in a missile and drone attack late on Monday in the Dnipropetrovsk region of eastern Ukraine.
A strike on the industrial city of Kamyanske left two people dead and five injured, according to regional head Serhiy Lysak.
Another person was killed and several were wounded in the Synelnykivsky district, while a 75-year-old woman was killed and a 68-year-old man injured when their home was hit in a village late on Monday.
The wave of attacks came as Russia pushed deeper into Ukrainian territory in Dnipropetrovsk.
At the weekend, Moscow said its forces had captured the village of Maliyevka, weeks after capturing their first village in the region. Ukraine has rejected Russia’s claims.
Meanwhile, in Russia, officials said Ukraine had launched dozens of drones overnight in the southern Rostov region, killing one person in their car in the town of Salsk and setting fire to a goods train.
Another person was reported killed in their car in the border region of Belgorod and his wife was wounded.
Tom Hayes, the UBS trader wrongly imprisoned for 5 years for interest rate rigging, shares his experience of finally being cleared of all charges
Former UBS and Citigroup banker Tom Hayes was one of the few people convicted of crimes and sentenced to prison for trading activities leading up to the Great Financial Crisis. His conviction was overturned last week by the U.K. Supreme Court.
Hayes told Fortune the news took days to sink in—even though he was notified about the decision a day in advance.
“It was actually like 24 hours of anxiety, just like ridiculous anxiety, like ‘Are they going to change their mind? Are they going to change the ruling? Is something going to change,” he said. “Then, obviously, once the ruling came out, bang, like, I just got very busy, very quickly.”
In Hayes’ case, a U.K. court found he manipulated a key interest rate used by banks as a benchmark that set costs for hundreds of millions of dollars of loans and mortgages worldwide. The “manipulation” was that Hayes and colleagues at other banks would discuss the range of interest rates at which their banks were willing to lend money to each other (the “London Inter-Bank Offered Rate” of interest, or Libor), and then Hayes would select a rate inside that range that was most advantageous to his bank.
During the trial, prosecutors argued Hayes was the mastermind of a global operation to fix the now-defunct Libor, which underpinned everything from student loans to derivatives. Prosecutors argued Hayes led a network of traders and brokers to submit information that benefited his trades and earned illicit profits for himself and his employer.
In his defense, Hayes argued that the way he set rates was considered a routine part of doing business, and that no one in banking—especially his bosses—thought it was illegal.
A jury found that choosing an advantageous Libor rate was corruptly self-serving, and Hayes, now 45, was sent to prison.
But, after a decade-long insistence on his innocence, Hayes was vindicated last week when his conviction was overturned. The court said the judge in Hayes’ trial misdirected the jury in a way that “undermined the fairness of the trial.” Yet, it did not fully absolve him, as the justices allowed that there was “ample evidence” in the course of Hayes’ trial that could’ve led to a conviction. The Supreme Court did not comment on the actions of the U.K.’s Serious Fraud Office (SFO), which prosecuted Hayes.
Courtesy of Sian Harrison
Hayes disagrees with the Supreme Court’s “ample evidence” claim. He argues that if the SFO, which investigates financial crimes, would have chosen to retry his case, if this were true. The SFO said it did not move to retry Hayes because it determined seeking a retrial would “not be in the public interest.”
“If I’d been retried, I would have actually relished that, because I probably would have won,” he told Fortune.
The SFO declined to comment to Fortune beyond what it said in a public statement.
Although 19 other bankers were also convicted in the U.K. and U.S. for the LIBOR scandal, Hayes’ 14-year prison sentence was among the harshest. He served just over five years in prison (his sentence was reduced to 11 years on appeal) and another four years on probation.
Hayes’ conviction was overturned on July 23 but it wasn’t until July 26 that the ruling hit home, he said.
That was the day he opened a letter from his sister. She wrote him a letter nearly every week, if not more often, while he was in prison, said Hayes. Following the decision on his conviction, he said, she sent one more.
“The last letter, she called it. She just said, you know, ‘I thought that I should write to you this one last time using pen and paper,’” he said. “The last paragraph of it was, ‘I’m so proud of you, Tom. Here’s to never writing you a letter ever again. The end of an era. And what an end.’”
So today it sort of hit and I broke down in tears. My little sister wrote to me every week in prison. I saved every letter. This morning I opened another letter from her. A final letter, ending shown below. Those letters were so important to me and a great way to close a chapter. pic.twitter.com/eJgYXIQQU6— Tom Hayes (@robilypj) July 26, 2025
Tom Hayes: scapegoat
Hayes usually prefers to avoid attention. On the London Underground, he likes to shuffle into a corner and look at his phone to avoid being recognized, he said. Walking around town, his eyes are always fixed on his feet.
Despite his discomfort, the former star yen derivatives trader for UBS and Citigroup has become globally recognized, some might say, as a fall guy for the Libor scandal, which involved myriad actors, including bankers, banks, and even world governments.
In the aftermath of the 2008 financial crisis, Hayes said the public’s yearning for a scapegoat played into his conviction as well. Getting a fair shake was impossible, he said, at a time when governments and the media were looking to hold bankers to account following the Great Financial Crisis.
In Hayes’ view, he and his fellow bankers were unfairly targeted for engaging in routine business practices that, at the time, everyone thought were legal. Among those prosecuted was Carlo Palombo, a former Barclays exec, whose conviction for rigging another benchmark rate, Euribor, was also overturned last week by the U.K. Supreme Court.
“Eric Holder gave a live press conference charging me when I’d never even been spoken to by the DOJ. I had nothing to do with America, and I got charged with the same offense at the same time in the U.K. Not even terrorists get that,” he said.
The SFO, which, besides Hayes, also successfully prosecuted another nine people for rigging rates, is at conflict with itself because of its mandate both to investigate and prosecute, said Hayes. In his case, the SFO’s reliance on an investigation by the outside counsel of his former employer, UBS, was also problematic, he claimed.
“There’s a very dark side to the relationship between third-party law firms acting for banks who are suspects and being paid hundreds of millions by those banks or corporates who are suspects and acting in their interests, and their relationship with prosecutors and regulators and that hand-in-glove approach where you know, they all have sort of a similar goal,” he said.
In prison, Hayes ran into inmates who couldn’t believe he was given such a lengthy sentence for fraud and assumed he was either a pedophile or an undercover police officer. In prison, he shied away from conflict, and was only “throttled” once he said, though the altercation ended quickly. Contrary to common belief, Hayes felt safer in the high-security prison, which was less unruly because “the real guys don’t even got nothing to prove.”
Looking to the future
Hayes maintained that he’s no longer constantly angry for the time he spent in prison or at the judge who oversaw his trial. During his time in confinement, he became a Christian, he said, and learned to forgive. His conviction being overturned last week has also helped keep the “weeds” of his repressed rage from sprouting up again, he said.
“Interestingly, I felt those weeds have not been appearing quite so much since Wednesday. So definitely, I think whatever happened on Wednesday is helping me with that.”
Looking to the future is difficult. Despite—or perhaps because of—being on probation, he hasn’t felt free for years. He’s undecided on whether he’ll return to finance, even as the U.K. Financial Conduct Authority dropped his lifetime ban Friday, Bloomberg reported.
One thing he does know is he feels a responsibility to speak out for other convicted bankers who were sentenced for similar charges, despite his wish to live anonymously. At least four convicted bankers have already said they will appeal their convictions following the Supreme Court’s decision on Hayes’ case this week, the Financial Times reported.
For now, though, Hayes is ready for a break. After a week of interviews, he enjoyed a weekend away with his father and 13-year-old son in St Ives, a small coastal town in Cornwall, in the southwest of England. In the future, he wants to live by the sea and buy a dog, he said.
Hayes, who at the pinnacle of his career was bringing in a multi-million-dollar salary with incentives, is now focused on the things he used to take advantage of, and he said the rest of the world should too.
“Don’t take your freedom for granted. Don’t take all the things that are amazing in your life for granted,” he said. “Don’t get obsessed about just trying to acquire more stuff and thinking this is a good way of measuring your quality of life, because it really isn’t.”
Trump refutes claims of pursuing summit with Xi, hints at potential visit to China | Latest Updates on Donald Trump
US president says he will visit China only at the invitation of Chinese leader.
United States President Donald Trump has denied seeking a summit with Chinese President Xi Jinping while holding out the possibility of visiting China at his counterpart’s invitation.
“The Fake News is reporting that I am SEEKING a ‘Summit’ with President Xi of China. This is not correct, I am not SEEKING anything!” Trump said in a post on his Truth Social platform on Monday.
“I may go to China, but it would only be at the invitation of President Xi, which has been extended. Otherwise, no interest! Thank you for your attention to this matter.”
Trump’s comments come after the Reuters news agency reported last week that aides to the two leaders have discussed a possible summit during a trip to Asia by the US president later this year.
The report, which cited unnamed people familiar with the plans, said Trump and Xi could possibly meet on the sidelines of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation summit taking place in South Korea from October 30 to November 1.
Trump and Xi last met face-to-face in 2019 on the sidelines of the G20 summit in Osaka, Japan.
The US and China are currently engaged in negotiations aimed at lowering trade tensions that have spiked since Trump rolled out his on-again, off-again tariffs on Chinese exports.
On Monday, US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and Chinese Vice Premier He Lifeng met in Stockholm, Sweden, to kick off two days of talks focused on reaching a trade deal before the end of a 90-day tariff truce that ends on August 12.
Bessent said in an interview with Bloomberg Television last week that the administration was in “a very good place with China now” and the August deadline could be extended in a “90-day increment”.
Flighthouse, Create Music Group’s digital content studio, introduces sports-centric Fieldhouse
Create Music Group-owned digital content studio Flighthouse Media sees an opportunity in bringing sports media to Gen Z fans, and to make it happen, it’s launching a new brand: Fieldhouse.
Fieldhouse is “a sports-first, chaos-powered content brand built for the next generation of fans,” the company said in a statement on Monday (July 28).
What, exactly, does that mean? For one thing, it means content like “gamified debates” and hot takes designed to “spark rivalries, ignite group chats, and keep fans engaged beyond the game.”
In other words, it’s ESPN for the TikTok generation.
“We saw a clear gap: traditional sports media isn’t resonating with this generation,” Flighthouse CEO Ash Stahl said.
“Gen Z doesn’t just watch sports, they react to it, interact with it, and shape the culture in real time. Fieldhouse is our take on the next generation of sports content: funny, fast, deeply online, and made for fans who grew up as much on TikTok as they did on ESPN.”
So far, it seems to be working: Flighthouse says Fieldhouse has already attracted 145,000 followers and 150 million views. Featured guests so far have included NFL athletes from the Cowboys and Texans, college stars from USC and UCLA, and cultural icons like the Harlem Globetrotters and the Dallas Cowboys cheerleaders.
Fieldhouse has also picked up some early brand sponsors, including SeatGeek and PrizePicks.
“Gen Z doesn’t just watch sports, they react to it, interact with it, and shape the culture in real time.”
Ash Stahl, Flighthouse Media
While sports media may seem outside the wheelhouse of a music distribution, rights management and publishing company, it does fit with its identity as an “audience company,” as Co-Founder and CEO Jonathan Strauss puts it.
“I’ve tried to keep this philosophy of encouraging our team members to build their own companies within Create,” he said in a recent interview. Stahl “has done this at a scale we never expected.”
Overall, Flighthouse Media boasts 330 million followers and over 1 billion monthly views on TikTok, YouTube, Instagram and Snapchat across its brands, which include Flighthouse, Retirement House and Flighthouse Radio.
Create acquired Flighthouse in 2016, when it was a discovery channel on Musical.ly (now TikTok), and folded it into FH Media, which it formed in 2023. Create also folded viral marketing agency VRTCL, which it acquired in 2022, into FH Media. The company has created campaigns for brands like Starbucks, Netflix and Beats by Dre.
Per Forbes, major music names like Atlantic Records, Capitol Records, Universal Music Group’s Interscope, Island, and Republic labels, and Warner Music Group have been Flighthouse marketing partners.
And in sports, Flighthouse sees an opportunity to expand its audience – and with it, the potential for brand partnerships.
“After what we’ve built with Flighthouse, Gen Z’s home for pop culture and female-driven fandom, and Retirement House, which proves you can grow old without growing up, stepping into sports felt like a natural next move for Flighthouse Media,” Stahl said.Music Business Worldwide