Wartime Intelligence Leaks Can Sink Allies

If Ukraine’s air defenses are now at risk, the U.S. bears some of the blame.

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With World Cup now in sight, USWNT face a balancing act to stay healthy

Two games against a tough Ireland squad has the USWNT needing to properly manage the next three months before the World Cup kicks off.

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Aptible (YC S14) Is Hiring: Security Engineer and Head of Product

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Michigan couple welcomes 1st baby girl born into the family after 138 years of boys: 'Utter shock'

A Michigan couple is seeing pink as they welcomed a baby girl named Audrey in March, ending a 138-year streak of only boys being born into the family.

When Carolyn and Andrew Clark of Caledonia, Michigan, held their “gender reveal” party, they weren’t expecting any big surprises.

Andrew Clark had informed his wife before they married 10 years ago that they would not be having a girl — due to a long line of male-dominated births in his family.

WASHINGTON FAMILY WITH 6 SONS ERUPTS IN EXCITEMENT DURING GENDER REVEAL OF 7TH CHILD: ‘PURE SHOCK’

“I didn’t believe him because it’s a 50/50 chance of having a boy or a girl,” Carolyn Clark, 36, told Fox News Digital.

“So when he told me that, I just thought he was kidding,” she added.

Carolyn Clark said that the next time she saw her husband’s parents, she decided to get to the bottom of the family’s abundance of male births.

MISSISSIPPI COUPLE WELCOMES ‘RARE’ QUINTUPLETS AFTER INFERTILITY BATTLE: ‘THE BIGGEST BLESSING’

“They told me, ‘Oh yeah, this is a real thing,” Carolyn Clark said. 

“My father-in-law pulled out some family tree to show me.”

Carolyn Clark said there was one name on the family tree — the person who was apparently the last girl to be born in the family. 

The family member’s birth year was 1885. 

“I said, ‘This does not seem right. I’ve never heard of this happening before,” Carolyn Clark recalled.

But there was more proof.

KENTUCKY WOMAN WITH OVER 230 GREAT-GREAT-GRANDCHILDREN MEETS GREAT-GREAT-GREAT-GRANDCHILD: SEE THE PHOTO

“My grandpa was really big into our genealogy,” Andrew Clark, 34, told Fox News Digital. 

“So, he traced it back and found all the birth certificates and marriage certificates and death certificates.”

And when the couple had their son Cameron, 4, it seemed that history was repeating itself, Carolyn Clark said. 

“I thought, ‘It must be true. His brothers only have boys as well, so I guess this is actually real.'”

Having all boys isn’t necessarily a point of pride in the Clark family, Andrew Clark said. 

ALABAMA BABY BORN ON SAME DAY AS MOM AND DAD: ‘1 IN 133,000′ CHANCE

“It was just a crazy fact that kept occurring in our lives,” he said.

Still, every time someone in the family was having a baby, there was always a glimmer of hope that the child would be a girl.

“Even when we were biting into the cookie for our gender reveal, we were just expecting it to be blue,” Carolyn Clark said. 

The Clarks invited their family over to bite into cookies to reveal whether they’d be welcoming a boy or a girl. 

Carolyn Clark said she, her husband and their loved ones were in “utter shock” when they learned the streak would be broken (SEE THE VIDEO at the top of this article).

NEW JERSEY GRANDMOTHER GOES VIRAL FOR RANKING HER 10 GRANDKIDS: ‘JUST BE CAREFUL’

“My sister-in-law and I were always saying, ‘There has to be a girl at some point, whether it’s us or maybe our boys will have a daughter at some point.’ So when we bit into [the cookie], I looked at her like, ‘Is this pink?’ And she freaked out.”

Carolyn Clark said she wondered if Audrey’s birth might pave the way for future Clark girls.

KENTUCKY WOMAN WITH OVER 230 GREAT-GREAT-GRANDCHILDREN MEETS GREAT-GREAT-GREAT-GRANDCHILD: SEE THE PHOTO

“We were happy either way,” she said. 

“We just wanted a healthy baby and it was just the icing on that cake that it was a girl. Andrew’s brother and his wife are wanting more kids,” she said — and added that she hoped it “gives my sister-in-law hope that it can be done.”

Before little Audrey was born, the Clarks had suffered a miscarriage, which is why the couple has called their brand-new daughter a “rainbow baby.”

A rainbow baby is a baby born after a loss due to miscarriage, infant death, stillbirth or neonatal death, according to the American Pregnancy Association.

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“Rainbow babies are considered ‘miracle’ babies due to the powerful impact they can have on helping parents heal after a loss,” the organization wrote on its website.

Carolyn Clark had been scheduled to be induced on March 16, but Audrey had other plans and arrived on the morning of the 17th — St. Patrick’s Day. 

“We just thought that was super special that she is our rainbow baby, and she came on the day of celebrating luck,” mom Carolyn Clark said. 

“So, she’s kind of our lucky charm.”

North Carolina GOP move on school choice with new supermajority after Dem's stunning party switch

Republican lawmakers in North Carolina are poised to push ahead with school choice legislation and other education reforms, a key policy area where the GOP has surging momentum following the high-profile defection of a Democratic legislator.

State Rep. Tricia Cotham announced last week that she’s joining the Republican Party after serving her deep blue Charlotte-area district as a Democrat. While North Carolina Republicans already held strong majorities in both chambers of the state legislature, Cotham’s decision gave Republicans a veto-proof supermajority in the House in what observers described as a “political earthquake.”

The threat of a veto from Democratic Gov. Roy Cooper had prevented Republicans from implementing much of their agenda, but now the GOP has a clearer path to push a wide range of legislation — including on school choice.

“The House Republican caucus has for several years pushed for more reform on school choice. We believe that giving parents power over their child’s education improves educational experiences for everyone,” Rep. Jason Saine, the North Carolina House GOP caucus leader, told Fox News Digital. “

NORTH CAROLINA GOP GOES ON OFFENSE, PUSHING AMBITIOUS AGENDA WITH NEW SUPERMAJORITY IN STATE HOUSE

“Representative Cotham, as a former teacher and principal, is in a unique position as an elected member of the House, to assist in badly needed reforms,” continued Saine. “She was already part of the reform team, and she’s now freer to openly work on those reforms in an environment that cares more for children than antiquated systems.”

Cotham referenced school choice at a press conference last week when announcing her change of party affiliation, suggesting the Democratic Party’s stance on the issue was one reason why she became a Republican.

“On issues like school choice, like charters, we have to evolve,” Cotham said in explaining her change of party. “One-size-fits-all in education is wrong for children … [Democrats] didn’t really want to talk about children. They had talking points from adults and adult organizations.”

As chair of the Education K-12 House Standing Committee, Cotham is in a prime position to influence education reform bills that come out of the House. And fellow Republicans, armed with a veto-proof majority, are looking to press their advantage.

“The GOP will push through significant bills on education choice and parental involvement in schools,” said Chris Sinclair, a political strategist in North Carolina. “I believe Cotham will be on board with a lot of these forthcoming bills.”

NORTH CAROLINA LAWMAKER OFFICIALLY LEAVES DEMS FOR GOP, SAYS TURNING POINT WAS AMERICAN FLAG CRITICISM

One such measure, House Bill 219, is designed to provide equal funding for charter school students as well as those attending traditional public schools. It would change the current factors which determine per-pupil funding that public school districts must share with local charter schools, with proponents arguing money should follow the student if their family chooses to attend a charter school.

“If a student attends a charter school, the local school administrative unit in which the child resides shall transfer to the charter school an amount equal to the per pupil share of the local current expense fund of the local school administrative unit for the fiscal year,” the legislation states.

According to critics, however, the current education structure in place is sufficiently fair and House Bill 219 would be taking money away from public schools.

“We believe every student should have the same per-pupil amount of local tax dollars, no matter what school they go to, ” Bruce Mildwurf, director of governmental relations for the North Carolina School Boards Association, told WRAL News. “This bill significantly tilts the scales in favor of the charter schools.”

“That is money out of the classroom; it is fewer teachers; it is fewer resources. Charters are benefiting at the expense of district-wide students,” continued Mildwurf. “School boards want fair funding. We currently have fair funding. This bill is unfair funding and will take millions of dollars away from school districts each year.”

GOV. DESANTIS SIGNS UNIVERSAL SCHOOL CHOICE INTO LAW: ‘MONUMENTAL DAY IN FLORIDA HISTORY’

Saine dismissed such claims as “political double speak,” saying the money should go toward educating students, not supporting the current system.

“Going so far as to suggest that the bill seeks to take funding from traditional students when the fact is we believe money should follow the child, not an antiquated system that has bred disparity in outcomes across the state,” said Saine.” This bill, cosponsored by several House leaders, including Rep. Cotham and myself, seeks to end the practice.”

Charter school attendance in North Carolina has surged by more than 19% from 2019 to 2022, according to the North Carolina Department of Public Instruction. Such growth seems to be an indication of increased unhappiness with traditional public schools.

Saine argued that while some public-school systems do well in educating students, many “fall way short and unfortunately do a great disservice to many families,” calling for new innovations to the status quo.

EMBOLDENED BY NEW SUPERMAJORITY, NORTH CAROLINA REPUBLICANS GO TO WORK ON TRANSGENDER BILLS

“Unfortunately, many in education refuse to innovate or acknowledge shortcomings,” said Saine. “What probably alarms guys like Midruff is his message rings empty on representatives like me and others. The district I represent has never received the ‘fair funding’ he claims exists and actually receives the least under the current system he defends. What’s an even bigger counter to the educational left’s argument is our district does far more in performance measures with less money than all other systems.”

House Bill 219 may be just one of several education reform measures pushed by Republicans.

“Expansion of school choice, election law reforms, as well as many other issues are still being discussed and planned,” said Saine. “Having just completed the House budget proposal and receiving the vote of nine Democrats on our budget bill, which also included a number of policy reforms, we think we are in a good place to continue to move our agenda forward.”

The state House on Thursday approved a two-year budget plan that now goes to the Senate for a vote. The budget expands school choice by growing private-school choice programs and charter schools, in part through the Opportunity Scholarship Program, a means-tested scholarship designed to allow low- and moderate-income families to attend the private school of their choice.

Cooper had proposed a budget that would eventually phase out Opportunity Scholarships.