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DNC leader faces growing scrutiny amid party turmoil

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Democratic National Committee (DNC) Chair Ken Martin is under pressure amid growing turmoil within the party’s ranks six months into President Trump’s second administration. 

The committee has been plagued by party infighting that has spilled out into the open in recent weeks. Last week, two influential union heads — American Federation of Teachers President Randi Weingarten and American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees President Lee Saunders — stepped down from their posts at the committee. Meanwhile, former Vice Chair David Hogg announced he would not run for his post again amid internal disagreements with party leadership. 

And on top of the infighting, reports have surfaced the committee is strapped for cash amid frustration among donors. 

The developments have painted a picture of weakness, barring Democrats from fully uniting behind Trump. Some critics argue the issues can be traced back to Martin, but others insist it’s a reflection of the Democratic ecosystem as a whole. 

“Ken Martin is stepping into a really difficult situation right now, and I would say he was elected and they handed him a mop and a bucket,” said Brian Lemek, a Democratic strategist and founder and executive director of Defend the Vote.

Martin assumed his position in the top role at the DNC in February after defeating then-Wisconsin Democratic Party Chair Ben Wikler in a competitive chair’s race. His election came months after the party’s sweeping losses across the board in 2024. 

His allies note Martin hit the ground running, unveiling his 50-state strategy in April. Martin pledged the DNC would donate a baseline of $17,500 to state parties and territories, marking a $5,000-per-month increase over the committee’s previous contribution. 

Martin has also seen a number of special election victories during his tenure, including in Iowa, Nebraska and Pennsylvania. 

“The man is everywhere,” said New Jersey-based DNC member Laura Matos, noting Martin’s recent trip to the state, which is holding its governor’s race in November. 

“New Jersey doesn’t regularly get the love and the attention for the purposes of the things we have going on here,” she said. “He kicked off canvasses when he was here.” 

Still, recent polling paints a picture of a deeply unsatisfied Democratic base. 

A Reuters/Ipsos poll released Thursday found 62 percent of Democrats said “party leaders should be replaced.” Forty-nine percent of Democratic respondents said they were “unsatisfied with current leadership,” while 41 percent said they disagreed with the sentiment that they were unsatisfied with leadership. 

And most of the coverage surrounding the committee has been dominated by intraparty fighting that has spilled out into the open, something Democratic lawmakers are cognizant of. 

In a post on the social platform X following Weingarten’s exit earlier this week, Rep. Ro Khanna (D-Calif.) said he wants “to build a party with a big tent and inclusion, not subtraction and pushing people out.”

“[Weingarten] understands the need for trades schools & apprenticeships more than anyone in our party [and Hogg] the need for primary competition and generational change,” Khanna said. 

And earlier this month, Rep. Mark Pocan (D-Wis.) said on X he “would love to see a day go by that the DNC doesn’t do something embarrassing and off-message” ahead of the vote to redo Hogg and Pennsylvania state Sen. Malcolm Kenyatta’s (D) vice chair elections. 

“Everyone should be focused on killing the cuts to healthcare & food assistance & education. And everyone should focus on next November,” Pocan said, adding “internal bullshit done externally is stupid.” 

New York state Sen. James Skoufis (D), who ran against Martin for chair earlier this year and is a member of the committee’s People’s Cabinet, said Hogg is at “the nexus” of the intraparty tensions. 

“There’s a lot of noise being generated by a very small handful of what I’ll call backbiters who have some axe to grind,” Skoufis said. 

Saunders and Weingarten endorsed Wikler in the party chair’s race earlier this year, and both were later removed by Martin from the DNC’s influential Rules and Bylaws Committee. Both cited disagreements with Martin in their letters announcing their departures. 

Not every member who was removed by Martin from the Rules and Bylaws Committee has taken that approach. Florida state Sen. Shevrin Jones (D), who is a DNC member who was removed from the committee by Martin, said he still backs the chair. 

Jones argued that the internal tensions spilling out into the open only serve as a distraction for Democrats in their battle to take on Trump and Republicans. 

“I think people need to separate their emotion from the work that needs to be done because the infighting that we’re seeing, it’s taking our focus off of the bigger picture at hand,” Jones told The Hill. 

“For us to be in this moment and we’re wasting our time talking about power and position when we should be talking about policy and people. That is how we’re going to win elections,” he said. 

John Verdejo, a North Carolina-based DNC member who supports Martin, said the changes Martin brought with him to the committee are to be expected given the switch-up in leadership. 

“I attribute that to real life where there’s new management and when new management comes into any work situation, they want to change things up the way they see fit and that’s what happened, especially in the case of the two labor presidents,” Verdejo said. 

“Our problem is we’re so quick, DNC members, or Democrats, really, if we want to complain, instead of complaining to the person aggrieved us, in this case Ken Martin, we’re so quick to tweet it out or talk to the press about it instead of talking to the person that aggrieved us,” he continued. 

The DNC has also been subject to questions about its finances as it prepares for the midterms next year. The committee entered May with $18 million cash on hand, compared to the Republican National Committee, which started the month with $67.4 million in the bank. Additionally, in the first four months of 2025, only three donors gave $100,000 or more to the committee. 

A New York Times report published earlier this week highlighted reported concerns from Democrats about the committee’s finances, but others note the smaller dollar donors should not be ignored. 

“The DNC historically has too exclusively prioritized larger donors at the expense of smaller donors and that is no longer happening,” Skoufis said. 

On Friday, the committee announced it had raised $40 million during Martin’s first four months as chair. In May, the DNC said it outpaced grassroots fundraising in May 2023 and 2024 and raised twice as much in grassroots dollars compared to May 2017. 

“Powered by our grassroots community, the DNC has just set a new record for most money raised in the first four months under a new Chair — ever,” Martin said in a statement. “What matters is winning elections, making Democrats competitive everywhere, expanding our tent, and putting our party on the right path.”

Others within the DNC say the lower-than-usual numbers from larger donors are to be expected following 2024. 

“Large donors made it clear that they were not going to give to the DNC until we got our act together. I think we knew that going into this,” Jones said, adding he believes donors will come back. 

“But they’re not going to come back if they still see a disconnect internally,” he said. 

Best CD rates today, June 22, 2025 (lock in up to 4.4% APY)

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Find out how much you could earn by locking in a high CD rate today. A certificate of deposit (CD) allows you to lock in a competitive rate on your savings and help your balance grow. However, rates vary widely across financial institutions, so it’s important to ensure you’re getting the best rate possible when shopping around for a CD. The following is a breakdown of CD rates today and where to find the best offers.

Historically, longer-term CDs offered higher interest rates than shorter-term CDs. Generally, this is because banks would pay better rates to encourage savers to keep their money on deposit longer. However, in today’s economic climate, the opposite is true.

As of June 22, 2025, the highest CD rate is 4.4% APY, offered by Western Alliance Bank on its 3-month CD. There is a $1 minimum opening deposit required.

The amount of interest you can earn from a CD depends on the annual percentage rate (APY). This is a measure of your total earnings after one year when considering the base interest rate and how often interest compounds (CD interest typically compounds daily or monthly).

Say you invest $1,000 in a one-year CD with 1.81% APY, and interest compounds monthly. At the end of that year, your balance would grow to $1,018.25 — your initial $1,000 deposit, plus $18.25 in interest.

Now let’s say you choose a one-year CD that offers 4% APY instead. In this case, your balance would grow to $1,040.74 over the same period, which includes $40.74 in interest.

The more you deposit in a CD, the more you stand to earn. If we took our same example of a one-year CD at 4% APY, but deposit $10,000, your total balance when the CD matures would be $10,407.42, meaning you’d earn $407.42 in interest. ​​

Read more: What is a good CD rate?

When choosing a CD, the interest rate is usually top of mind. However, the rate isn’t the only factor you should consider. There are several types of CDs that offer different benefits, though you may need to accept a slightly lower interest rate in exchange for more flexibility. Here’s a look at some of the common types of CDs you can consider beyond traditional CDs:

  • Bump-up CD: This type of CD allows you to request a higher interest rate if your bank’s rates go up during the account’s term. However, you’re usually allowed to “bump up” your rate just once.

  • No-penalty CD: Also known as a liquid CD, type of CD gives you the option to withdraw your funds before maturity without paying a penalty.

  • Jumbo CD: These CDs require a higher minimum deposit (usually $100,000 or more), and often offer higher interest rate in return. In today’s CD rate environment, however, the difference between traditional and jumbo CD rates may not be much.

  • Brokered CD: As the name suggests, these CDs are purchased through a brokerage rather than directly from a bank. Brokered CDs can sometimes offer higher rates or more flexible terms, but they also carry more risk and might not be FDIC-insured.

How the Universe and Its Mirrored Version Are Different

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Kitty couldn’t have digested looking-glass milk. Worse, if it had contained any bacteria with the opposite handedness, her immune system and antibiotics would have been ill suited to put up a fight. A group of prominent scientists recently cautioned against the synthesis of mirror-image lifeforms for this reason—if any were to escape the lab, they could evade regular lifeforms’ defense mechanisms.

Shrinking Down

Continuing down the rabbit hole, we see traces of chirality all the way to elementary particles.

Pasteur’s work on molecules rested on a previous discovery by Augustin-Jean Fresnel, who in 1822 realized that different quartz prisms could send light’s electric field twirling in one of two directions—clockwise or counterclockwise. If each particle of light could leave a smoke trail in its wake, a right-handed screw of smoke would emerge from one prism and a left-handed screw from another.

Nowadays, physicists consider chirality a fundamental property of all elementary particles, just like charge or mass. The particles that don’t have mass are always traveling at the speed of light, and they also all carry an intrinsic angular momentum as though they’re spinning like a top. If the particles are flying in the direction of your thumb, their spin follows the direction your fingers curl—on either your right hand or your left.

The situation is a bit more complicated for massive particles, such as electrons and quarks. Because a massive particle travels more slowly, a speedy observer could overtake it and effectively reverse its direction of motion, thus flipping its apparent handedness. For this reason, when describing the chirality of massive particles, physicists often refer to the mathematical description of the particle’s quantum properties. When you rotate a particle, its quantum wave function shifts left or right depending on its chirality.

Almost every elementary particle has a twin through the looking glass. A negatively charged left-handed electron is mirrored by the anti-positron, a negatively charged right-handed particle.

In looking-glass world, Alice finds all logic turned on its head: People run in order to stay in place, and they celebrate “un-birthdays” on all the days they weren’t born. Similarly, our universe differs from its mirror image. The weak force—the force that’s responsible for radioactive decay—is felt only by left-handed particles. This means that some particles will decay in the normal world while their counterparts in the mirror would not.

Plus, there’s one particle that seems not to show up in the mirror at all. The neutrino has only ever been observed in its left-handed form. Particle physicists are investigating whether the right-handed neutrino exists or if neutrinos’ mirror images are simply identical, which could help explain why the universe contains something rather than nothing.

There’s a lot we can learn about our own world by peering through the looking glass. Just be careful not to drink the milk.


Original story reprinted with permission from Quanta Magazine, an editorially independent publication of the Simons Foundation whose mission is to enhance public understanding of science by covering research developments and trends in mathematics and the physical and life sciences.

Real Madrid hopeful of Kylian Mbappé return in last group game

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Xabi Alonso said Kylian Mbappé is “better” as he recovers from gastroenteritis, with Real Madrid hoping to have the star forward available for their last Club World Cup group game against RB Salzburg.

Mbappé was absent on Wednesday as Madrid drew 1-1 with Al Hilal in their opening game in Group H, after being hospitalised this week.

The France international has not travelled with the squad to Charlotte, North Carolina, to face Pachuca in their second match on Sunday, remaining behind at the team’s training base in Palm Beach, Florida.

“He’s better,” Alonso said in a news conference on Saturday. “Two days ago, he came back from the hospital. He’s recovering, and every day we’re more optimistic about getting him back for the last game against Salzburg [on Thursday].”

In Mbappé’s absence, forward Gonzalo García, 21, started in Miami, scoring Madrid’s goal in the 34th minute, before Rúben Neves levelled for Al Hilal from the penalty spot.

Madrid arrived at the Club World Cup looking to bounce back from a disappointing season in which they failed to win a major trophy.

Coach Alonso replaced predecessor Carlo Ancelotti, while the club moved quickly to land Dean Huijsen and bring forward Trent Alexander-Arnold‘s arrival. They have also signed River Plate’s Franco Mastantuono, who will join in August.

Alonso denied that the team need to sign an additional midfielder this summer to make the team competitive.

“We’re at the Club World Cup, we aren’t thinking about it,” Alonso said. “We aren’t in the phase of improving the squad, we’re focused on this competition. I think with who we have, we can have a dominant midfield. Obviously we have to work on it, but with different profiles, we can do it, I’m convinced.”

Madrid and Pachuca last met in December in the FIFA Intercontinental Cup final, with the LaLiga giants winning 3-0.

Sunday’s game at Bank of America Stadium will kick off at 3 p.m., with temperatures of over 90 degrees Fahrenheit forecast.

“When we play in Europe, at least in the summer, the games are later in the evening,” goalkeeper Thibaut Courtois said. “It’s not an excuse, they want to put it on for the European market, but I don’t think it’s optimal for the players and our health. I’d prefer to play in the evening.”

Chew on These Doggone Adorable Secrets about Lady and the Tramp

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Meghan Markle, Prince Harry Give Daughter Lilibet Royal Treatment With Disneyland Birthday

The sweetest tale of puppy love you ever did hear was inspired by a real-life Springer Spaniel named Lady Nell the Second. 

The year was 1937 and Walt Disney and his team at Walt Disney Productions were (heigh-ho, heigh-ho) off to work on their first feature film, Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs.

Character designer and story artist Joe Grant, meanwhile, was adjusting to his new role as dad, discovering along the way that his purebred pup was actually a pretty solid nanny to his non-furry child. 

Inspired, the New York City native has said, “Ideas began to flow in form of drawings and story situations. One drawing in particular was especially poignant and I showed it to Walt. He gave us a big ‘OK’ to develop Lady’s story into a feature, with the addition of Tramp to give the story a touch of romance.”

Well, hot dog!

Except when Walt saw the draft—involving a visiting grandmother and her troublesome cats that attempt to frame Lady for, among other things, eating the pet canary—he wasn’t convinced it was the cat’s meow. 

Give new recruits £10,000 to join army, says Sir Ed Davey

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New soldiers should be offered a £10,000 bonus to rapidly boost troop numbers to deal with an increasingly unpredictable world, the Lib Dems have said.

The government should also distribute pamphlets to make sure every British home is “war-ready” and able to deal with blackouts and chaos caused by the outbreak of conflict or cyber-attacks, Lib Dem Leader Sir Ed Davey said.

The Lib Dems claim the plans will “urgently” boost to the number of trained soldiers from just under 71,000 to more than 73,000.

In the face of a “barbaric” Russian President Vladimir Putin and an “erratic” US President Donald Trump, Sir Ed said the UK must be better prepared.

Over the weekend, Sir Ed visited Estonia to see British troops on what he called Nato’s “frontline with Russia”.

His visit had shown him “it is clear given the threat of a barbaric Putin and the challenge of an erratic Trump, we need to do more to make Britain war-ready,” he said.

“War readiness also starts at home,” Sir Ed added, “which is why I am calling for a public awareness campaign aimed at every home in Britain – to make sure we’re all prepared for the possibility of a conflict or hostile acts such as major cyber-attacks”.

Under the plans, new recruits receive a £10,000 bonus after completing training and serving for two years.

Former armed services personnel would be offered a £20,000 payment if they return to serve two additional years.

The starting salary for new recruits to the British Army is £26,334 a year.

Under a government scheme launched last November, a total of 17,000 armed forces personnel became eligible for retention payments.

Aircraft engineers can get £30,000 if they sign up for a further three years, with privates and lance corporals eligible for £8,000 for four years.

The proposed Lib Dem scheme would be limited to 3,000 personnel, including new recruits and re-enlistees, with its £60m cost covered by the main defence budget.

The plans are drawn up with the expectation that defence spending would rise to 2.5% of national income or GDP by 2027 – as promised by Labour.

The Lib Dems have called for the uplift in defence spending to be funded through an increase of the Digital Services Tax – a 2% levy on the biggest social media and tech companies, which raises about £800m a year.

The Lib Dems argue the bonus scheme would “urgently increase” the number of trained UK regular soldiers up to 73,000 – from the 70,752 listed in the most recent official documents.

Last month, the government set out plans for a small increase to the size of the regular army to 76,000 full-time soldiers after 2029 – although this has yet to be funded.

Labour has also proposed a 20% increase in Active Reserves “when funding allows” – most likely after 2030 following an overhaul of the armed forces.

The government is consulting on plans to regenerate military homes with £7bn of funding by 2025, after bringing the defence estate back under Ministry of Defence (MoD) control last year.

A Labour spokesperson labelled Davey’s anger at cuts “confected: he backed them to the hilt”.

They added: “Ed Davey seems to have forgotten that he was a Minister in the coalition government which slashed troop numbers by 20% and cut defence spending by £2 billion in its first year.

“This Labour Government inherited an army hollowed out and underfunded, reduced to its smallest size since the Napoleonic wars.

“We have boosted defence spending by £5 billion, pledged to move to warfighting readiness, and reaffirmed our unshakeable commitments to NATO and Trident as part of the Plan for Change.”

The Conservatives have called for an increase in UK troop numbers but have not set out how many they think are needed.

This week, the shadow defence secretary James Cartlidge set out plans to have military homes run by a housing association to tackle the “poor” state of accommodation and stem an exodus of troops.

Nearly a third of UK troops were considering leaving the armed forces due to the standard of accommodation, the Ministry of Defence’s (MoD) own survey found.

Republicans express concern about lack of Trump trade deals

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A number of Republicans are becoming increasingly frustrated with the lack of tariff deals from President Trump two weeks away from a July 8 deadline that could lead to the reinstating of heavy tariffs on imports from around the world.

The administration has announced deals with China and the United Kingdom, and it insists it is working hard on others. Officials have also suggested there could be some wiggle room on the deadline.

“I think they’re working very hard on them — I know that for a fact,” said Sen. Susan Collins (R-Maine). “I think the approach that was taken in the first place creates a lot of complications because it does produce this enormous workload and need for negotiation with an enormous number of countries.”

Asked whether she is concerned the administration’s negotiators are stretched thin, Collins was blunt. “Yes,” she said. “Very.”

Trump announced wide-ranging tariffs in April, saying heavy duties would be placed on imports from countries around the world. The announcement contributed to a stock sell-off, and the president quickly shifted his tune, saying the larger tariffs would be put off for 90 days to provide time for negotiations.

That has helped markets rebound, though they have not reached their highs from before the tariffs.

The short time period and the lack of deals so far are raising nerves on Capitol Hill.

“Members want the president to make quick trade deals because we need clarity and certainty from a business perspective,” said one senior Senate GOP aide.

“Obviously, the president has rightfully lofty goals about economic growth, and that’s not going to happen if we have prolonged uncertainty in the marketplace,” the aide added, noting that numerous companies have not only hit the pause button on growth opportunities, but also are losing money and being forced to divert business overseas because of the uncertainty surrounding the Trump tariff agenda. 

The source also noted there’s confusion as to who the point person in the Trump administration is on tariffs.

“It’s not only that they’re stretched thin, but there’s also confusion on who’s the lead here,” the aide said, noting that at various points, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick have taken the wheel. “I just don’t think any of that’s helpful either.” 

Members want to see more trade deals as soon as possible to provide more certainty for businesses.

“There’s definitely a lot of uncertainty,” Sen. Shelley Moore Capito (R-W.Va.) said. “Everybody, and I know the administration’s working toward this, would like to see … more numerous solid wins.”

“There’s just a lot of anxiety in terms of deployment of capital because people are uncertain, and I think some good, solid wins as we move into July are going to allay that,” she continued. “I think in the beginning that helped. They had a couple of wins and then it’s gone a little silent.” 

The tariffs have fallen in attention as markets rebounded and the focus on Capitol Hill turned to Trump’s legislative agenda. The Senate this week will try to move his budget reconciliation package, which would extend and expand the 2017 tax cuts. It hopes to complete work on the bill by July 4, though that deadline is in danger of slipping.

The tax bill is also meant to provide certainty to business, so many senators see the two issues as going hand-in-hand.

“This is all about certainty, and we have a lot of uncertainty with [the bill], plus this. It’s just compounding [problems for businesses] right now,” the Senate aide said. 

Bessent stayed at the Group of Seven (G7) summit in Canada after Trump left early Monday night. While the Treasury Department didn’t announce any concrete progress from Bessent at the G7 on trade, Bessent suggested to lawmakers earlier this month that the July 8 deadline could have some wiggle room for certain countries.

“It is highly likely that for those countries that are negotiating — or trading blocs, in the case of the EU — who are negotiating in good faith, we will roll the date forward to continue the good-faith negotiation,” Bessent said. “If someone is not negotiating, then we will not.”

Best high-yield savings interest rates today, June 22, 2025 (best accounts offering 4.0% APY)

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Find out how much you could earn with today’s savings rates. The Federal Reserve cut its target rate three times in late 2024, which means savings interest rates are falling from their historic highs. It’s important to be sure you’re getting the best rate possible when shopping around for a savings account. The following is a breakdown of savings interest rates today and where to find the best offers.

The national average savings account rate stands at 0.38%, according to the FDIC. This might not seem like much, but consider that three years ago, it was just 0.06%, reflecting a sharp rise in a short period of time.

As of June 22, 2025, the highest savings account rate available from our partners is 4.31% APY. This rate is offered by VIO Bank and there is no minimum opening deposit required.

Since these rates may not be around much longer, consider opening a high-yield savings account now to take advantage of today’s high rates.

Here is a look at some of the best savings rates available today from our verified partners:

The amount of interest you can earn from a savings account depends on the annual percentage rate (APY). This is a measure of your total earnings after one year when considering the base interest rate and how often interest compounds (savings account interest typically compounds daily).

Say you put $1,000 in a savings account at the average interest rate of 0.42% with daily compounding. At the end of one year, your balance would grow to $1,004.12 — your initial $1,000 deposit, plus just $4.12 in interest.

Now let’s say you choose a high-yield savings account that offers 4% APY instead. In this case, your balance would grow to $1,040.81 over the same period, which includes $40.81 in interest.

The more you deposit in a savings account, the more you stand to earn. If we took our same example of a high-yield savings account at 4% APY, but deposit $10,000, your total balance after one year would be $10,408.08, meaning you’d earn $408.08 in interest. ​​

Read more: What is a good savings account rate?

Poppin Sticky Memo Ball Review: Color-Code in Style

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If a messy desk is a sign of genius, I might be one of the smartest people out there.

Everywhere I’ve worked, whether in an office or my own house, I’ve begun with the purest of intentions to keep my desk clean and clutter-free, only to weigh the time and energy cost of constantly putting things away just to pull them out again the next day. Spoiler alert: Most of the time, it isn’t worth it. One of the biggest, ahem, sticking points in my decluttering process is the sheer number of sticky notes I use. Classic Post-It brand notes, sticky notes shaped like flowers, novelty pads, tape flags—all have a place in my office supply arsenal.

I write everything by hand, with a pen. And I mean everything. Not only in my paper planner but also on the sticky notes I have in nearly every room of my house. I have them in the kitchen, in my nightstand, in the car. And I always will, as it’s been scientifically proven that writing things down boosts learning and memory, since writing by hand activates more wide-ranging connections in the brain.

Image may contain Text Computer Electronics Laptop Pc Scissors Chair Furniture Document and Receipt

I love my Notes app as much as anyone else, but if I type something into it that I need to do in the future, I not only have to remember that I did so but also hope I titled it with something searchable. If I write it down on a sticky note, I will not only remember, but I can stick it exactly where I know I’ll see it. Doctor’s office unexpectedly calling while I’m in another room? Sticky note. Reminder for my husband who’s still asleep and doesn’t have his phone set to silent, so I can’t text him? Sticky note. Sticky notes for my kid. Sticky notes for my friends. Sticky notes in my car, in my garage … It’s an infallible system.

However, the worst offender of sticky note detritus is by far my workstation. If I receive any kind of actionable instruction, whether it’s in a meeting, an email, a Slack message, or via a phone call, it’s immediately written down on a sticky note and slapped on my planner or, if longer-range, pinned to the wall above my desk, which is lined with felt bulletin board wall tiles from Amazon and currently looks like the pelt of a disappointing piñata.

However, I hadn’t really thought much about what those notepads were doing for my space visually until I saw the Poppin’ Sticky Memo Ball, the 4.5-inch dodecahedron that looks something like a girly soccer ball but is actually a desk ornament you can put to use. This is the sticky note stack made into decor.

Back to School

Image may contain Sphere Box Indoors Interior Design and Art

Photograph: Kat Merck

The Sticky Memo Ball originated not in a boardroom at 3M, nor in the brains of Romy and Michelle, but at Rochester Institute of Technology. Each year, the STEM-focused school holds a design initiative called Metaproject, pairing companies with RIT students to create products focusing on the theme “Design Is One,” the official philosophy of the school’s Vignelli Center for Design Studies. (Named in honor of Italian designers Lella and Massimo Vignelli, the latter of whom is known for his modernist designs incorporating geometric shapes.)

Inter Milan 2-1 Urawa Reds (Jun 21, 2025) Game Analysis

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Valentin Carboni scored the game-winning goal in stoppage time to give Inter Milan a 2-1 win over Urawa in the Club World Cup on Saturday, ending the Japan club’s chances of advancing past the group stage.

Inter Milan held the vast majority of possession, but failed to score until the 78th minute when Lautaro Martínez brilliantly bicycle kicked Nicolò Barella’s corner ball into the net.

Carboni’s game-winner came in the second minute of stoppage time and was assisted by fellow substitute Francesco Esposito.

The Urawa Red Diamonds opened the scoring in the 11th minute. Takuro Kaneko assisted Ryoma Watanabe in transition, finding Watanabe all alone on the penalty spot with his cutback ball.