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Vintage photos reveal what grocery shopping looked like in the 1960s

Vintage grocery store ads from the 1960s are giving Americans a nostalgic look at a time when many grocery staples cost just pennies compared with today's prices.

The decades-old newspaper advertisements offer a glimpse into how Americans once shopped and how much grocery prices and shopping habits have changed over the years.

The advertisements feature prices that seem almost impossible by today's standards, from steak selling for less than a dollar a pound to five pounds of sugar for just 49 cents, according to food publication Tasting Table.

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However, after adjusting for inflation, the publication found that some grocery staples cost about the same as they do today, while others remain significantly more expensive.

Still, some foods really were bargains.

Sirloin steak sold for 78 cents per pound in 1966, which works out to about $7.95 in today's dollars, well below modern prices of roughly $17.99 per pound, Tasting Table reported. Pot roast, lamb and grapefruit also remain significantly more expensive today, even after adjusting for inflation.

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While the prices may seem like a steal, a closer look shows that not every grocery essential was actually the bargain it appeared to be.

A dozen medium eggs that cost 55 cents in 1966 would equal about $5.60 today after adjusting for inflation, while shoppers can now find a dozen medium eggs for as little as $1.59, according to the publication. Butter, milk and ice cream were also found to cost less today when inflation is taken into account.

The vintage ads also offer a snapshot of grocery shopping in another era, when families commonly bought 25-pound bags of potatoes, large canned hams and pound-sized bags of potato chips. Shoppers also stocked up on products such as oleo, a popular butter substitute.

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In recent years, vintage grocery advertisements have fueled conversations on social media, with users comparing old supermarket prices to today's grocery bills.

"My family has a bunch of old newspapers and I found this in one from the 1960s. Look at these prices!" one Reddit user wrote while sharing a vintage grocery ad advertising chuck roast for 45 cents a pound, peaches for 29 cents and three cans of green beans for 29 cents.

Others reminisced about grocery shopping traditions that have largely disappeared.

"I remember sticking [Green Stamps] into little books and bringing them to the S&H store with my mom to get a toaster," one commenter wrote, recalling the popular loyalty program that let shoppers redeem stamps for household items.

Others argued the prices were misleading without accounting for wages and inflation.

"Keep in mind the average worker only made $2.00-$3.00 an hour back then," one Reddit user wrote.

"You'd be spending the exact same percentage of your paycheck back then. This is how adjusted dollars works," another user added.

Lindsey Graham was booked for 64th 'Meet the Press' appearance before sudden death

"Meet the Press" host Kristen Welker paid tribute Sunday to the late Sen. Lindsey Graham after the South Carolina Republican died the night before, noting that he had been scheduled to make his 64th appearance on the NBC program that morning.

"Senator Lindsey Graham was scheduled to appear on @MeetThePress this morning. It would have been his 64th appearance on this broadcast. We are sending our deepest condolences to his family and colleagues," Welker shared on X.

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Welker announced that President Donald Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu would instead appear on Sunday’s broadcast to discuss Graham, who was a close Trump ally and staunch supporter of Israel.

"President Donald Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu will join us this morning to reflect on his life and legacy," Welker said.

During his conversation with Welker, President Donald Trump said he spoke with Graham on Saturday night just hours before the GOP firebrand's sudden death. Trump revealed the detail, saying they spoke in the early evening after Graham returned to Washington from Ukraine.

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"So what makes it even stranger is that I got a call last night sometime. You know, the early evening, maybe in the sevens. And he called, and he said, 'We're all set for the SAVE America Act.' He was pushing the SAVE America act like crazy. He got back, said he just landed from Ukraine and I said, 'That's a long trip to make.' And he said — he sounded a little tired, but perfect, but a little bit tired. Had a right to be. He was a worker. He was really a worker," Trump said.

"But he sounded great, actually... He said he was tired, but he wanted to pass the SAVE America Act. And I said, 'Well, we're going to get it done, Lindsey. We're going to get it done. I'll see you, like soon.' We thought maybe we might even meet today. And then that was it. And that was, you know, very around the time, it couldn't have been much longer. It could have been his last call. I don't know exactly, but I got a message about 1 in the morning from one of the people in his office that he had passed away. I said I just can't believe it. He was like a member of the family to me. It's very tough, actually. It's amazing," Trump added.

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During Netanyahu's conversation with Welker, the prime minister called Graham a "beloved friend," and said he was in a state of shock. Netanyahu also said the death of Graham was "grief" to Israel and "celebration" to Iran.

"Lindsey never confused good and evil," he said. "He knew exactly where the Iranian regime is. He thought it was a great danger, not merely to Israel and to America's allies in the Middle East, but to America itself."

The prime minister also praised Graham for never wavering, saying he had clarity and courage.

Graham died Saturday evening following a "brief and sudden illness," according to a statement from his office. He was 71.

"On the evening of Saturday, July 11, U.S. Senator Lindsey Graham passed away from a brief and sudden illness," his office said.

"Senator Graham's family appreciates prayers at this time and asks for privacy during this incredibly difficult period," it continued.

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Graham had represented South Carolina in the Senate since 2003 after serving four terms in the House. The former Air Force lawyer retired as a colonel after 33 years of military service and became a prominent advocate for a muscular U.S. foreign policy. He had returned from Ukraine before his death and was running for a fifth Senate term.

Under South Carolina law, candidate filing opens the second Tuesday after a primary nominee’s death and remains open for one week. The special primary is held two Tuesdays after filing closes, placing the election on Aug. 11, with a potential runoff on Aug. 25. The eventual Republican nominee would face Democrat Annie Andrews in the Nov. 3 general election.

Father, son killed in plane crash on way home from baseball game

A father and his 22-year-old son were killed when their small plane apparently flew into a developing storm on their way home from a St. Louis Cardinals game, with investigators saying the aircraft appeared to make a last-minute turn before spiraling down into a rural Illinois tree line.

The pilot, 48, and his son took off from St. Louis Regional Airport in Bethalto late Thursday and were headed to Siloam Springs Municipal Airport in Arkansas when the plane crashed near Waterloo, Illinois, the Monroe County Sheriff's Department in Illinois said in a press release.

The father and son have been identified as Jimmy Don Lewis and Brayden Ty Lewis, the Monroe County Coroner’s Office confirmed to KSDK.

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Investigators said the pair had spent the evening at a Cardinals game before starting the flight home in what is believed to have been a Beechcraft Baron 55 private aircraft.

"Investigators believe the aircraft departed into an area of developing severe weather," authorities said. "Flight data indicates the aircraft appeared to begin a turn, possibly in an attempt to avoid the inclement weather, before entering what appeared to be a descending spiral. Radar contact was subsequently lost."

Emergency crews were dispatched around 2:34 a.m. Friday after reports of a possible aircraft crash south of Waterloo. Search efforts were hampered for hours by low clouds, rain and poor visibility, forcing authorities to rely on a massive multi-agency response that included specialized drone teams from Illinois and the St. Louis region.

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An ARCH Air Medical helicopter eventually located the wreckage at about 7:40 a.m. in a tree line near the Columbia Quarry after investigators narrowed the search area.

"We extend our deepest condolences to the victims’ family and loved ones," authorities said after confirming both occupants of the aircraft had died in the crash. "Our thoughts and prayers remain with them during this incredibly difficult time."

Kelsey Lewis told the Daily Mail that her father and brother earned their pilots’ licenses together, saying the pair "did everything together." She also described her father as an experienced flyer.

"My dad, when it came to flying, he was very, very, cautious of everything," Kelsey told the outlet. "Very cautious."

She said an apparent glitch in the aircraft’s weather-tracking system that caused the readings to be about 30 minutes off could have led to the crash.

Representatives from the Federal Aviation Administration later assumed responsibility for the crash scene, while the National Transportation Safety Board and the FAA continue to investigate the cause of the crash.

Officials emphasized that the findings released so far are preliminary and that the federal investigation remains ongoing.

Tom Cruise saved Samantha Harris from getting crushed by a '500-pound' motorcycle

Former "Dancing with the Stars" co-host Samantha Harris has experienced her share of frightening moments throughout her life. From multiple battles with breast cancer to a terrifying on-set mishap, she's learned to roll with the unexpected. One of those close calls even ended with Tom Cruise coming to her rescue.

In an exclusive interview with Fox News Digital, the former "Entertainment Tonight" correspondent, 52, looked back on one of the most memorable celebrity interviews of her career — an adrenaline-filled promotional shoot in Seville, Spain, where Cruise quite literally saved her from an on-set injury.

"I've told my kids from the moment they were born… do not ride on a motorcycle," Harris said before detailing the event.

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"It was a closed course with like 20 different cameras set up and fans for the movie promotion standing around," Harris — who was working for "ET" at the time — continued. "We weren't even supposed to ride on the motorcycle. We were supposed to talk to him, do an interview and get into a chase car with a stunt driver and then chase him on his motorcycle. But I was like, 'Tom... can I just sit on the Ducati?'"

Harris said Cruise — who was promoting the 2010 movie "Knight and Day" at the time — happily agreed and encouraged her to "come on over."

"So we go over there, and he goes, 'Well, why don't you go ahead and hop on?' Well, let me tell you, I've only ridden horses. I've never ridden motorcycles. Now, if you know the difference with a horse, you put your left foot in the stirrup on the left side, and you swing your leg around, and you get on, so that's what I'm thinking I do."

"And I go to get on, and this Ducati, slow motion, as thousands of fans are watching, as cameras are rolling, this 500-pound Ducati starts to tip with me on it over, about to crush Tom Cruise."

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Before disaster struck, Cruise reacted.

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"And I am freaking out, but literally, like in a movie scene, Tom gets under that Ducati, catches it with both arms, pushes it, rights it back up," Harris said. "And I'm thinking I'm done. I got to go get in the chase vehicle."

Instead, Cruise encouraged her to give it another shot.

"And he says, 'Can we try that again? This time keep your foot planted… on the ground as you get on.'"

The second attempt went much more smoothly, Harris said.

"We got on the Ducati, he says, 'Hold on.' I wrap my arms around him and audibly — but I think I'm saying it in my head — go, 'Oh my God, your abs.' It was caught on TV. It aired later that day. My husband saw it at home while he's dealing with… our firstborn. And I'm pregnant with my second. I don't even realize I'm pregnant."

Cruise then sped off with Harris on the back of the motorcycle.

"Tom takes off through the streets of Seville, Spain. It was the most fun, awesome TV experience of all my different thousands of celebrity interviews," she said.

While Harris has interviewed countless Hollywood A-listers throughout her career, she said her perspective on life and work shifted dramatically after receiving a life-changing diagnosis.

The television host was diagnosed with stage 2 breast cancer in March 2014 at age 40. Looking back, Harris told Fox News Digital the experience ultimately led her to discover a new purpose.

"I absolutely found a new purpose," she said. "I mean, this is for the last 12 years now, since my initial diagnosis, I have really shifted. Yes, I love doing my work on television, but now the work I'm doing on television is much more blending the world of wellness and how we can have agency over our health future."

Earlier this month, Harris served as host of the Tower Cancer Research Foundation's annual Tower of Hope Gala in Los Angeles. During her conversation with Fox News Digital, she reflected on her cancer journey, revealing that multiple doctors initially dismissed the lump she discovered despite her concerns.

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"If there's a PSA for what I learned from my cancer diagnosis, (it) is that we have to be our own best health advocates," said Harris, who is also a certified health coach. "We can't just sit back and ignore signs when our body, as mine was screaming at me after I had three doctors after a clear mammogram over the course of four months tell me that the lump I found... was nothing. They said, 'No, Samantha, it's nothing. We touched it, we felt it. It was nothing.'"

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Despite the reassurances, Harris said her instincts told her something wasn't right.

"And that inner voice was screaming at me to say, 'Samantha, if this is truly nothing, how do we know unless we have more diagnostic testing?' And I'll be honest. All the diagnostic tests actually came back with... it's also not cancer," she said. "But, thankfully, I had an incredible specialist, a breast oncologist who took that tumor out not thinking it was a tumor, and we found out it was stage 2 invasive breast cancer."

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After undergoing a mastectomy, doctors discovered the cancer had spread further than initially believed.

"We eventually, from my mastectomy, found that it had gone to a lymph node. It was much more further along than we even realized," Harris said. "And it was in that moment, despite this wonderful television career I had hosting 'Dancing with the Stars,' hosting 'Entertainment Tonight,' all the fun red carpets, none of that was meaningful to me."

She underwent a double mastectomy and was declared cancer-free later that year.

However, the cancer returned in August 2024.

"[After my first diagnosis], every expert… was telling me to do A through Z three times over," she said. "And it took my diagnosis in 2024, when I had a recurrence again of this local regional recurrence that, thankfully, because of the healthy lifestyle changes I had made, that recurrence was very small. I caught it myself again, had doctors again tell me it was nothing, pushed again. And, thankfully, we found that it was, and we got it out, but it gave me another wake-up call."

While Harris admitted she still battles an ongoing fear of recurrence, she's grateful for where she is today.

"I am feeling more energetic, happier, healthier, more vibrant than I have ever been," she said. "And I really think that the changes that I have made since my initial cancer diagnosis, and then the pivot to becoming 10% toxic since my recurrence, has really given me a new lease on life. And I'm excited for this next chapter."

Katherine Heigl lists her Utah home for $10.6M as family prepares to downsize

Katherine Heigl is ready to part ways with her home in Utah.

The 47-year-old "27 Dresses" actress placed her home in the Utah mountains on the market for $10.6 million, in partnership with listing agent Paul Benson of Engel & Völkers Park City.

She reportedly purchased the land for $1 million in 2007 when she married her husband, musician Josh Kelley, and the two built the house together in 2008. They moved their family from Los Angeles to Utah full-time in 2012, and are now looking to downsize.

"It’s been very hard to decide to let it go. I’m a real sort-of homebody and creature of habit," Heigl told The Wall Street Journal. But the couple have realized that "when they’re all gone—all slaying their own dragons and living their lives —it’s just you and me in this giant house on this giant land," she added.

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Heigl shares three children with Kelley: Naleigh, 17, Adalaide, 14, and Joshua, 9.

The 8,352-square-foot home features six bedrooms and seven bathrooms, including two primary suites, as well as a great room with high ceilings and a 30-foot steel fireplace.

In addition, the property also includes a detached space which Heigl used as an art studio, but can be used as a guest suite, gym, home office or for any other purpose. Also on the property is a heated pool and multiple manicured lawns.

"We built these houses in Utah that we expected to be more kind of vacation homes, or when I could get away from the hustle and all the work. And we just started spending more and more time there," she told the "Today Show" in September 2023. "And it was my husband who finally made it his primary residence on his driver’s license and stuff. And we went. ‘Yeah, I think this is our primary residence. We live here now.'"

The actress began acting as a teenager, landing leading roles in films such as "My Father the Hero" and "Under Siege 2: Dark Territory," before breaking through on the TV series, "Roswell." Her biggest breakthrough, however, came in 2005, when she was cast as Izzie Stevens on "Grey's Anatomy."

Her work on the show earned her an Emmy Award win for supporting actress in a drama, and led to a successful film career, in movies such as "Knocked Up," "The Ugly Truth," "New Year's Eve" and others.

Following her Emmy award win, Heigl caused some controversy when she withdrew her name for consideration at the award show the following year, saying she "did not feel that I was given the material this season to warrant" another nomination. This ruffled some feathers, and combined with other comments she made about long working hours and wanting to spend more time with her family, led to her being labeled as "difficult," and being written out of the show.

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When speaking with "Grey's Anatomy" star, Ellen Pompeo during an episode of Variety's Actors on Actors series, Heigl admitted the show's overnight success gave her "a false sense of confidence."

"It was rooted in something that couldn’t and maybe wouldn’t always last for me. So then I started getting real mouthy, because I did have a lot to say, and there were certain boundaries and things that I was not OK with being crossed. I didn’t know how to fight that."

She admitted that "there was no part of me that imagined a bad reaction" when she confronted showrunners with her suggestions, adding she "felt really justified in how I felt about it and where I was coming from."

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"It took me until probably my mid- to late-30s to really get back to tuning out all of the noise and going, 'But who are you? Are you this bad person? Are you ungrateful? Are you unprofessional? Are you difficult?' Because I was confused! I thought maybe I was," she added. "I literally believed that version, and felt such shame for such a long time, and then had to go, 'Wait. Who am I listening to? I’m not even listening to myself. I know who I am.'"

While she has not reunited with the cast on-screen, she did participate in a mini "Grey's Anatomy" reunion with some members of the original cast on-stage at the 2024 Emmy Awards.

After leaving "Grey's Anatomy," Heigl starred in films like "One for the Money" and "Unforgettable," as well as TV shows such as "State of Affairs," "Suits" and "Firefly Lane."

Matt Damon was 'pushed to the limit' while filming 'The Odyssey,' details grueling physical discomforts

After more than three decades in Hollywood and roughly 80 films under his belt, Matt Damon says no role has tested him quite like Christopher Nolan's upcoming epic, "The Odyssey."

During an appearance on "Sunday Sitdown with Willi Geist," the Academy Award winner, 55, opened up about the grueling physical demands of portraying Odysseus, the legendary king of Ithaca, admitting the ambitious production pushed both the cast and crew to their limits.

"He was like, 'This movie's gonna be hard.' And I looked at him like, 'I've made, I don't know, 80 movies,'" Damon recalled of one of his early conversations with Nolan. "And he goes, 'No. This movie's gonna be really hard.' He, to his credit, was not lying."

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"It was definitely the hardest movie I've ever done just because it was so ambitious, just because what he was trying to do," Damon continued. "The prep and all that I had to do as a guy in his 50s, that was its own challenge. That was my own cross to bear, away from everybody."

The 55-year-old actor said filming took the cast across demanding locations, from beaches in Morocco to mountaintops and boats in unpredictable conditions.

"There was a lot of physical discomfort. It felt more like an expedition than a movie," Damon said. "Everybody was pushed to kind of the limit of what they could do. But the beauty of it is you look around and everyone is going through it with you."

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Despite the punishing conditions, Damon praised Nolan for leading by example.

"Directing is by far the hardest job on set," he said. "When you're out there kind of in the middle of a storm and you're soaked and you're cold and you're like, 'Man, I'm in discomfort right now,' it is helpful to turn and see the person with the harder job ... looking like a drowned rat, just as cold, just as wet, and never complaining."

Damon has previously shared details about the intense physical transformation required to play the iconic Greek hero.

During an appearance on Travis and Jason Kelce's "New Heights" podcast earlier this year, Damon revealed he lost a significant amount of weight after former Philadelphia Eagles center Jason Kelce remarked that the "Good Will Hunting" star looked "pretty yoked up" in viral photos from the film's set.

"Yeah, I was in really good shape," Damon said. "I lost a lot of weight."

According to Damon, Nolan had a very specific vision for Odysseus.

"He said he wanted me lean but strong," Damon explained. "It's a weird thing."

The Oscar winner said one major dietary change played a key role in helping him reach that goal.

"I literally, just because of this other thing I did with my doctor, stopped eating gluten," Damon said. "I used to walk around between 185 and 200 pounds. And I did that whole movie at 167 pounds."

"I haven't been that light since high school," he added. "So it was a lot of training and a really strict diet."

Earlier this month, Damon elaborated on the lifestyle overhaul during an appearance on Amy Poehler's "Good Hang" podcast, revealing that giving up gluten permanently has been "life-changing."

"It's just a complete, complete lifestyle change," Damon said after Poehler joked about him "getting jacked in your 50s."

"There's no planning it. Any other time I tried to do something like that, it was always like, 'Well, my time, my workouts'… and this was like… just put your foot on the gas and that's it. And that's the only way to do it, and eat a little less."

He said eliminating gluten unexpectedly transformed how he feels day to day.

"We didn't talk about it, and I didn't realize the level to which it was affecting me," Damon said. "It's completely changed my life these last couple years of not eating it. It's a bummer. I'm a big fan of bread and beer, and pasta and pizza and all that stuff, but how I feel is just so much better."

Graham's death ignites GOP scramble for Senate seat as Trump hints he already has a favorite

Sen. Lindsey Graham’s, R-S.C., sudden death from an undisclosed illness has triggered a two-pronged approach to replace him, and President Donald Trump will likely be a focal point in the process.

Graham's passing overnight comes at a time when Republicans in the upper chamber need every vote they can get. The Senate GOP now holds a 52-seat majority, and with the timetable for Sen. Mitch McConnell’s, R-Ky., absence still unclear, that majority is now effectively 51 votes.

That will up the pressure, and drama, to find a replacement for the longtime South Carolina lawmaker.

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Trump, during an appearance on NBC’s "Meet the Press" on Sunday, said, "I have somebody that I think would be great."

"But I don’t want to say it now because it’s just, it’s too soon with Lindsey," Trump said. "I don’t wanna even talk about anybody, but I do have somebody that I think is really good."

It’s a process guided by the Constitution and state law. The first step will require South Carolina Gov. Henry McMaster, a Republican, to appoint a replacement for Graham on a temporary basis.

McMaster, a close ally of Trump, can appoint a temporary replacement as soon as he wants. That pick will serve until the next special or general election.

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Fox News Digital did not immediately hear back from McMaster’s office on when he would make the announcement, or who he was considering for the seat.

Graham was already in-cycle running for a fifth term in the upper chamber, and he easily cruised to a primary victory early last month. That means that whoever McMaster taps would serve until the end of the year to finish off the remainder of Graham’s fourth term.

The second prong is finding his long-term successor.

The candidate filing period for that special election to win the GOP nomination opens July 21. The election is slated for Aug. 11, according to South Carolina law.

That race could see several familiar faces in South Carolina GOP politics jumping in, including McMaster himself, who is termed out as governor.

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Trump heaped praise on McMaster, noting that he endorsed his first bid for the White House in 2016.

"Henry’s been a great governor, you know now he’s termed out, but he’s going to do the right thing," Trump said. "I think Henry will be fantastic."

There are six members of South Carolina’s GOP congressional delegation who could toss their hats into the mix. Rep. Nancy Mace, R-S.C., who recently lost a bid for the GOP gubernatorial nomination, is eyeing jumping into the special election.

A person familiar with Mace's plans told Fox News Digital, "Congresswoman Mace is considering a bid to run."

Then there’s Rep. Joe Wilson, R-S.C., the longest-serving Republican member of the Palmetto State’s delegation. He quickly snuffed speculation about whether he’d leap into the fray.

"I was grateful to speak with President Trump today reminiscing about our mutual friend, Senator Lindsey Graham," Wilson said on X. "I assured him my goal is to remain in the House to keep his two-vote majority for the American people!!!"

Then there’s the remaining four: South Carolina Republican Reps. Ralph Norman, who also lost out on scoring the GOP nomination for governor, Russell Fry, William Timmons and Sheri Biggs, none of whom, so far, have signaled that they would jump into the battle for Graham's seat.

Meanwhile, Pamela Evette, who Trump endorsed in the governor’s race but ultimately lost to GOP nominee and South Carolina Attorney General Alan Wilson, could also be in the mix.

Fox News Digital did not immediately receive responses to requests for comment from each possible contender.

Rescue robot of tomorrow may be a cockroach in scuba suit

A cockroach in a tiny scuba suit sounds like something you would run from, not something you would send into a disaster zone. Yet scientists say this strange little setup could one day help rescue teams search places people and larger robots cannot safely reach.

Researchers from NTU Singapore and Waseda University have developed a flexible diving suit for cyborg cockroaches. The suit lets the insects survive and move underwater, as well as through low-oxygen spaces, for up to three hours.

The study was published in Nature Communications. The goal is to expand how cyborg insects could help after floods, earthquakes or other disasters where rubble, drains and tight spaces can block access.

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A cyborg cockroach is a living insect fitted with tiny electronics that can guide its movement. Unlike a small artificial robot, it uses its own muscles to walk. That means it needs far less battery power than a robot that depends on motors. However, cockroaches still need air. They breathe through small openings called spiracles. Once submerged, they cannot pull oxygen from water.

That is where the cyborg cockroach diving suit comes in. The suit has an oxygen-generation tank, a flexible waterproof shell and four silicone oxygen tubes. Together, those parts keep water out while sending oxygen directly to the cockroach's breathing openings.

The oxygen tank is 3D-printed from a clear plastic-like resin. Inside, researchers placed a sponge treated with manganese dioxide. They then added a small amount of diluted hydrogen peroxide. That chemical reaction slowly releases oxygen. From there, the oxygen travels through the suit and into tubes attached to the cockroach's spiracles. In other words, the insect gets its own tiny oxygen system. The researchers compare it to the tank used by human divers.

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The team tested the suit on the Madagascar hissing cockroach. That species is often used in cyborg insect research because it is large, sturdy and wingless. The suit turns the cyborg insect from a land-based crawler into an amphibious rescue robot that can move across dry and wet terrain.

That could help in places where normal robots struggle. A disaster site may include collapsed concrete, standing water, blocked drains and narrow gaps. A small insect-guided system could move through those spaces while future versions carry sensors or cameras. The idea may make your skin crawl. Still, the engineering is impressive. Researchers are using the cockroach's natural movement and adding a way for it to keep breathing underwater.

With the diving suit, the cyborg cockroaches stayed active underwater for up to three hours. Without the suit, a control cockroach suffocated within about two minutes during testing. The researchers also tested the insects in plastic tunnels that simulated tough rescue conditions. One setup included a carbon dioxide-filled section followed by a water-filled section. The cyborg cockroaches wearing the suit made it through.

The team also tested narrow underwater gaps. With implanted electronics instead of a bulky backpack, the cyborg cockroach moved through a 2-centimeter-high crevice. That is the kind of space where many small robots could get stuck.

The biggest takeaway is that rescue robots may not always look like machines. In some cases, they may use a living insect's body and add technology around it. A cyborg cockroach can crawl through debris, squeeze into tight spaces and use very little power. Add underwater movement, and it becomes more useful in flooded disaster zones.

That could help after heavy rain, earthquakes or infrastructure failures. Future versions could inspect flooded pipes, drains, tunnels or damaged buildings. The researchers are still improving the system. They want to test it in more disaster-style environments, make the suit more durable and add sensors and navigation tools for field use.

You probably will not see cyborg cockroaches crawling around your neighborhood anytime soon. This is still research, not a rescue tool ready for everyday emergency crews.

However, it shows where search technology may be heading. Rescue teams need tools that can reach places humans cannot safely enter. If a small living insect can carry electronics, move through rubble and keep going underwater, it could become part of a larger rescue system.

That could eventually mean faster inspections after floods, better access inside damaged buildings and more options when every minute counts.

A cyborg cockroach in a diving suit sounds wild, but the reason behind it is serious. Disaster zones can be full of tight spaces, toxic air and standing water. Those conditions can stop people, drones and many small robots. This research gives scientists a new way to think about rescue technology. Instead of building every part from scratch, they are using the cockroach's natural movement and adding the missing piece: underwater breathing. To me, the big question is what happens when this kind of technology gets sensors, cameras and better navigation. That could turn a creepy little crawler into a tool that helps save lives.

Would you be comfortable with cyborg insects being used in search-and-rescue missions if they could help find people faster? Let us know by writing to us at Cyberguy.com

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Lindsey Graham, South Carolina senator who rose from small-town roots to GOP power broker, dies at 71

Sen. Lindsey Graham, who died Saturday at 71 following what his office described as a "brief and sudden illness," spent more than three decades as one of the Republican Party's most influential voices.

The South Carolina Republican forged a congressional career spanning more than 30 years, emerging as one of Capitol Hill's most recognizable Republicans and a trusted advisor to President Donald Trump on national security, judicial nominations and foreign policy.

Born on July 9, 1955, in Central, South Carolina, Graham grew up helping his parents run the family business before becoming the first in his household to attend college.

His life changed dramatically while he was a student at the University of South Carolina, when both of his parents died within 15 months of each other, leaving him to raise his younger sister.

SEN. LINDSEY GRAHAM DEAD AT 71 AFTER 'BRIEF AND SUDDEN' ILLNESS, OFFICE SAYS

After earning a law degree, Graham joined the U.S. Air Force Judge Advocate General's Corps, serving as a military lawyer before entering politics. He remained in the Air Force Reserve throughout much of his congressional career, retiring as a colonel after more than three decades of service.

His political career began in 1992, when he was elected to the South Carolina House of Representatives. Two years later, he won a seat in the U.S. House as part of the Republican wave that gave the GOP control of Congress.

He emerged as a national figure during President Bill Clinton's impeachment, serving as one of the House managers who presented the case against Clinton during the 1999 Senate trial.

The high-profile role elevated his standing within the Republican Party and helped establish him as a rising conservative voice on Capitol Hill.

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In 2002, he was elected to the Senate, succeeding longtime Republican Sen. Strom Thurmond.

Over the next two decades, Graham became one of the Senate's most influential Republicans on national security, serving on the Armed Services and Judiciary committees while emerging as a leading voice on military affairs, judicial confirmations and U.S. foreign policy.

One of Graham's closest political relationships was with Arizona Sen. John McCain.

Along with Democratic Sen. Joe Lieberman, the three became known as the bipartisan "Three Amigos," frequently traveling to war zones and emerging as some of Congress' strongest advocates for American military power and support for U.S. allies.

CHAD PERGRAM BREAKS DOWN WHAT'S NEXT FOR GOP AFTER GRAHAM'S DEATH

Graham championed higher defense spending and was among Congress' most vocal supporters of Israel and, more recently, Ukraine.

He also played a central role in reshaping the federal courts. As chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, Graham helped steer the confirmation of dozens of federal judges, including Supreme Court Justice Amy Coney Barrett. He also emerged as one of Brett Kavanaugh's fiercest defenders during the justice's contentious 2018 confirmation battle, calling the process "the most unethical sham" he had seen in politics.

His relationship with Trump underwent one of Washington's most notable political transformations.

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After sharply criticizing Trump during the 2016 Republican primary, Graham became one of the president's closest congressional allies, advising him on judicial nominations, national security and foreign policy while serving as a key defender of his agenda. Graham was once again critical of Trump in the wake of the January 6 Capitol Hill riots, but Trump appeared to shrug that off when he returned to the White House.

Graham remained a leading voice in the Republican conference until his death. At the time of his death, he was serving as chairman of the Senate Budget Committee and campaigning for a fifth Senate term.

He never married and had no children.

South Carolina Gov. Henry McMaster called Graham "irreplaceable" and the "fiercest of fighters for South Carolina and America." Per South Carolina law, McMaster will appoint a temporary replacement for Graham, who was seeking a fifth term in November.

President Trump wrote on Truth Social that Graham "was always working," and called the Palmetto State senator "a true American Patriot." 

Funeral and memorial arrangements were not immediately announced. Trump said on Truth Social that "details and arrangements" would follow.

Man turns tragic loss of best friend to suicide into urgent outreach to lonely strangers

This story discusses suicide. If you or someone you know is having thoughts of suicide, please contact the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline at 988 or 1-800-273-TALK (8255).

A 30-year-old man has been asking people he doesn’t know to sit with him in pubs across the country ever since December of last year, as part of what he calls his "Empty Chairs" campaign.

Dean Perryman came up with the idea after his best friend, Rob Clancy, tragically died by suicide at age 29 just a month earlier.

Wanting to make sure nobody else ever felt alone — even perfect strangers — Perryman started heading out to restaurants and pubs wearing a bright orange hoodie to make his presence obvious to anyone choosing to chat with him. 

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Just a few weeks ago, he held his program's 1,000th meet-up in Leigh-on-Sea, Essex, featuring about 12 attendees — and said he's proud of how far it has come.

"It has been such an incredible experience. I am loving every second of it still," the resident of Stratford in East London told news agency SWNS.

"When I started, it came from such a place of sadness — and to see how this simple idea has been able to help so many people has been really nice," he said. "I have been able to meet and connect with so many new people and learn about them. It gives people an opportunity to speak openly if they need it."

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Perryman works for team-building game company Chicken Rush. He used social media, he said, to create interest in the "Empty Chair" idea, he said.

The events started in London and Essex before the founder began recruiting volunteers to host them across the U.K. — and the rest of the world as well.

Events have since been planned in Manchester, Bedford, Cambridge, Skegness, Gloucester, Leeds, York, Wrexham, and more.

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It has also branched out to other countries, including Colombia, Spain, the United Arab Emirates and Australia.

He said lots of people actually return to the events, especially in smaller rural towns, as people create and build friendships that last long afterward.

Perryman, who has attended 61 himself, said his favorite part of the events is seeing men open up about their troubles, as he feels they need a safe space to do so.

"Some people come because they really want someone to listen to what they have to say," he said. "Others come because they have the capacity to be there for someone else. Everyone shares their own story, but it stays at the table."

He said the groups have "talked about the difficulty of living in a big city and feeling isolated, but nothing is off the table — we’ve spoken about everything and anything. To give people a place that they can go when they need to talk is incredible."

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Perryman said he has about 200 more events already lined up — and said he has no plans to stop scheduling them, SWNS reported.

He said there is no pattern in terms of who shows up. Usually, it's a diverse group of people. 

"Every Empty Chairs event you go to, you are going to meet people of different walks of life," he said. "It is so powerful to show that, no matter who you are, there is a place for you. We have everyone — men, women, young, old. There really isn’t a barrier to entry for this. Whoever needs the space is welcome to come."

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He also said, "A lot of people come because they’re feeling lonely in a new area, or they want to make new friends."

He said he hopes that his Empty Chairs campaign can be a lasting legacy for his best friend, Rob — someone he believes needed a similar space.

"He was the kindest, sweetest guy you could ever hope to meet," said Perryman. "Like a lot of men, he wasn’t the biggest sharer. He was very much the life and soul of anywhere you went, but he wasn’t someone who would be the first to open up about it if he was feeling some type of way."

"To now be in a position where Empty Chairs looks like it could be a legacy for Rob is amazing," Perryman added.