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Monday Sunrise Briefing: Search for survivors and a cause

Here are three news events - Florida rescue efforts, Donald Trump and The Boss return to the stage - from this past weekend (while you may have been making peach ice cream or tubing down a river, and enjoying an offline life). Also, what to look for in the news this week.

By David Clark Scott, Audience Engagement Editor

As rescuers dug through the rubble this weekend in Surfside, Florida, looking for more than 150 missing people, new evidence emerged suggesting serious problems three years ago. A 2018 engineering report called for听$9.1 million in extensive repairs to Champlain Towers South, the 12-story building that collapsed on Thursday. The report did not warn of imminent danger from the damage, and it is unclear if any of the damage observed was responsible for the collapse. But Gregg Schlesinger, an attorney specializing in construction defects told the Associated Press: 鈥淭he building speaks to us. It is telling us we have a serious problem.鈥澨鼵ity officials ordered inspections of all buildings in the area, including a 鈥渟ister鈥 12-story building, and Miami-Dade County officials plan to launch an audit of all buildings five or more stories high and at least 40 years old.

2. Trump rally: Nostalgia or comeback?听Former President Donald Trump reprised his baseless claims of electoral fraud on Saturday in Ohio holding his first campaign-style event since leaving the White House. On Sunday, the Atlantic published a story about the fading loyalty of former Attorney General William Barr, who denounced Mr. Trump's efforts to overturn the 2020 election. When asked by Trump why he told the AP on Dec. 1 that there was no fraud in the election, Mr. Barr replied "because it鈥檚 true.鈥澨齋aturday鈥檚 rally marks the beginning of a new, more public phase of Mr. Trump鈥檚 post-presidency. Some have dubbed it the 鈥淩evenge Tour,鈥 as Mr. Trump has vowed to pay back Republican members of Congress he perceives to have crossed him. He is planning a flurry of public appearances in the coming weeks. Another rally is planned in Florida over the July Fourth weekend and he will travel to the southern border in the coming week to protest Biden鈥檚 immigration policies.

3. Broadway returns with 'The Boss.'听Bruce Springsteen welcomed a packed house Saturday to New York City鈥檚 Broadway for the first time since the pandemic shut down theaters in March 2020. Springsteen had ended his 鈥淪pringsteen on Broadway" residency in December 2018 after 236 performances, but was persuades to come back for this summer. Most Broadway shows aren鈥檛 scheduled to open until September. New York also recently held its first full-capacity concert since March 2020 at Madison Square Garden. The Foo Fighters welcomed back fans on June 20. That show also only allowed a vaccinated audience.听

Look Ahead

MONDAY, June 28听

Athleticism on ice. Last year鈥檚 champs, the Tampa Bay Lightning, take on the Montreal Canadiens in the NHL Stanley Cup finals at 8 p.m. ET. The Canadiens have not won the cup since 1993.听

Athleticism on grass. The two-week long Wimbledon tennis tournament begins today without two of tennis' biggest stars: Naomi Osaka and Rafael Nadal. But Serbian Novak Djokovic is looking for his third Grand Slam win of 2021. Serena Williams will be gunning for a 24th Grand Slam title.

WEDNESDAY, June 30

A kind of leadership transparency. Russian President Vladimir Putin hosts in his annual one-man TV show, including a Q&A with Russians via phone or email.

THURSDAY, July 1

Canada Day. A day of national pride that commemorates the joining of Canada's original three provinces (Nova Scotia, New Brunswick and the Canada province) as one nation in 1867.听

Communist celebration. China marks the 100th anniversary of the founding of the ruling Communist Party, which came to power in 1949 after the rival Nationalist (Kuomintang) government fled to Taiwan.

Generosity Watch

Children are remarkably creative. They鈥檒l find a way to play with whatever鈥檚 available. But when some Chicago cops saw kids playing basketball by shooting into a milk crate, they decided to give them a better option. Members of the Chicago Police Department鈥檚 6th District chipped in to buy those children a new basketball hoop and three new balls.听

Last Monday, several police officers showed up and presented their boxed gift. One boy was led out to his front porch by his mom with his eyes covered. The boy then saw the box being delivered by a couple of officers and yelled in delight, "Thank you!"听"Is that a little bit better?" one cop asks, giving the boy a high-five. "Yeah!" he says, in a video posted听 by the Chicago Police Superintendent David O. Brown.

The officers stuck around to assemble the new hoop, and take a few shots with the neighborhood kids.听

Hidden Gem

Start your week with a recent story that inspired Monitor readers:

Women on a mission: Life-changing adventures by horse and bicycle

Sneak preview

In tonight鈥檚 Daily Edition, watch for our story about the power of outdoor education.

Finally, check out the Monitor鈥檚 selected stories from Friday's subscription-only Daily Edition:

  1. Iran nuclear deal may be just what hard-line president-elect needs
  2. 鈥楾he pope needs to apologize.鈥 Unmarked graves near schools roil Canada.
  3. How risky is virus 鈥榞ain of function鈥 research? Congress eyes China.
  4. Nicaraguans sound alarm over declining democracy. Who鈥檚 listening?
  5. Beach-worthy books to savor in summer: Monitor staff picks

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