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Shanel Wells whips up delicious Creamy Lemon Pasta

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www.wjbf.com – Brandon Dawson – 2025-05-30 10:59:00

SUMMARY: Chanel Wells shares her recipe for Creamy Lemon Pasta, combining fresh lemon juice and zest with a rich sauce made from heavy cream, garlic, nutmeg, butter, olive oil, and grated Parmigiano-Reggiano and Pecorino Romano cheeses. Fettuccine pasta is cooked al dente, with reserved pasta water added to the sauce to adjust consistency. The sauce is prepared by sautéing garlic, reducing lemon juice and zest, then mixing in cream, spices, and cheese. After combining the pasta with the sauce, it’s cooked until thickened, then garnished with basil and extra lemon zest for a fresh finish.

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News from the South - Georgia News Feed

Two South Carolina schools looking to make history in state championship games

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www.wjbf.com – Gianna Cefalu – 2025-05-31 10:00:00

SUMMARY: Two neighboring South Carolina high schools face state championship games Saturday. Batesburg Leesville Panthers aim for their first 2A baseball title in over 70 years, having won Game 2 by 3-2 with strong pitching and timely hitting. Coach Rob Bouknight praised his team’s defense and resilience. The decisive Game 3 will be at Founders Park at 6 p.m. Meanwhile, Saluda Tigers softball team, in their first-ever state championship appearance, have faced rain delays but are preparing for Game 2 at home at 7 p.m. Coach Hannah Towery emphasized consistency in defense and seizing scoring opportunities to push the series to Game 3.

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Trump sends detailed budget request cutting spending by $163 billion to Congress

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georgiarecorder.com – Jennifer Shutt – 2025-05-31 07:25:00


On May 22, 2025, the Trump administration released a detailed 1,224-page budget request to Congress, outlining proposed federal spending cuts for fiscal year 2026. The request calls for a $163 billion reduction in domestic spending while maintaining flat defense funding. The document aids appropriations committees but excludes mandatory program goals and tax policy. House and Senate appropriations committees will draft funding bills in June, with Senate requiring bipartisan support. Failure to agree could result in a partial government shutdown. Democrats criticized the proposal as harmful to working Americans, while Republicans are expected to align with Trump’s request.

by Jennifer Shutt, Georgia Recorder
May 31, 2025

WASHINGTON — The Trump administration released significantly more detail about its budget request Friday evening, giving Congress the information it needs for lawmakers to draft the annual government funding bills.

The 1,224-page document sheds light on where exactly President Donald Trump and White House budget director Russ Vought want lawmakers to cut federal spending during the upcoming fiscal year.

The Office of Management and Budget released a “skinny” version of the annual proposal in early May, requesting lawmakers cut domestic spending by $163 billion and keep funding for defense programs flat in the dozen annual appropriations bills.

While the documents in that request provided some insight into how Trump wants to reshape the size and scope of about $1.7 trillion in discretionary funding, which is spending that Congress directs, they didn’t include the level of detail that the Appropriations committees need to begin their work.

The appendix document released Friday should aid in that, though it does not represent a full budget request. That type of proposal would include the White House’s goals for mandatory programs, like Medicare, Medicaid and Social Security, which make up about two-thirds of federal spending. Such spending is required by law and is not subject to annual appropriations.

A full budget request also typically includes tax policy proposals, though with Republicans in Congress already working to enact an extension of the 2017 GOP tax law in the “big, beautiful bill,” those sections would likely be of little use to lawmakers at this point.

Work on spending bills launching

The House Appropriations Committee is scheduled to release and debate its 12 government funding bills throughout June, before voting to send those measures to the floor.

Chairman Tom Cole, R-Okla., will likely include funding levels and policy closely aligned with the White House request, since legislation in that chamber can pass a floor vote with a simple majority

Senate Appropriations Committee Chairwoman Susan Collins, R-Maine, has a more challenging task, since regular bills in that chamber require bipartisanship to get past the 60-vote legislative filibuster. Republicans control the Senate with 53 members.

In general, that means the Senate panel’s bills tend to look much more like the final version that becomes law than the House bills, though not always. 

Both chambers are supposed to reach a bipartisan, bicameral agreement on the dozen bills before the start of the next fiscal year on Oct. 1, but that rarely happens.

Congress is much more likely to use a stopgap spending bill until mid-December to give members more time to negotiate funding levels and policies on thousands of government programs.

The House and Senate were unable to reach agreement for this fiscal year, and instead leaned on a series of three continuing resolutions to keep the government up and running.

Partial shutdown could loom again

Tensions over the proposed funding cuts in Trump’s first budget request of his second term could reach a boiling point if Cole, Collins, House ranking member Rosa DeLauro of Connecticut and Senate ranking member Patty Murray cannot broker an agreement before their deadline.

Failure to enact some sort of government funding legislation — either the dozen full-year bills, or a stopgap spending measure — would lead to a partial government shutdown. 

Murray, D-Wash., wrote in a statement released Friday evening that it was “telling that President Trump has chosen to release his budget on a Friday night with no fanfare whatsoever.”

“This is a draconian proposal to hurt working people and our economy, and it is dead on arrival in Congress as long as I have anything to say about it,” Murray wrote. “But this is just another reminder we need Republicans to join us to reject these reckless cuts, focus on the investments we actually need to make in our communities and security, and to finally force Trump to follow the law and end his devastating funding freeze.”

DeLauro wrote in a statement that the “government envisioned by President Trump only serves billionaires and the biggest corporations and would do nothing to lower the cost of living.”

“This is not a complete budget,” she wrote. “We are supposed to start putting together the funding bills for 2026 next week. If, as expected, House Republicans follow what President Trump has proposed so far, it is not a serious effort to deliver for the American people.”

Georgia Recorder is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Georgia Recorder maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor John McCosh for questions: info@georgiarecorder.com.

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Note: The following A.I. based commentary is not part of the original article, reproduced above, but is offered in the hopes that it will promote greater media literacy and critical thinking, by making any potential bias more visible to the reader –Staff Editor.

Political Bias Rating: Center-Right

This article presents a mostly factual and neutral overview of the Trump administration’s 2026 budget request, focusing on details of the funding proposals and legislative process. While it includes critical statements from Democratic lawmakers opposing the budget, the coverage balances this with factual descriptions of Republican positions and procedural context. The tone does not overtly endorse or condemn the policies but reflects the typical partisan divide on budget issues, leaning slightly toward a Center-Right perspective by presenting the Trump administration’s fiscal priorities prominently and factually, while also giving voice to opposition critiques without adopting their framing fully.

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Mothers and mental health | FOX 5 News

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www.youtube.com – FOX 5 Atlanta – 2025-05-31 06:05:16

SUMMARY: A recent JAMA study of nearly 200,000 mothers with children under 18 reveals a significant decline in maternal mental health, with one in 12 rating their mental health as fair or poor in 2023. Only 25% of moms now report excellent mental health, down from 38% in 2016. Experts suggest causes including limited mental health care access, social isolation, substance use, child care shortages, and financial strain. Prioritizing moms’ mental health is critical, as their well-being affects their children’s development. While dads also experienced declines, mothers’ mental health worsened more severely, highlighting a public crisis needing urgent attention.

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It appears the struggle is real for moms. A new study of nearly 200,000 mothers found their mental health has significantly declined and for dads, well not so much.

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