Jones Beach
No mentions found
This entity hasn't been tracked yet, or Iris is still building its knowledge base.
Related Articles from SNS
Trump admin’s cancellation of wind energy projects causes business turmoil
Trump admin’s cancellation of wind energy projects causes business turmoil Seven northeastern states have sued US gov’t for paying TotalEnergies to withdraw from offshore wind projects. French energy giant TotalEnergies is embroiled in a lawsuit between seven US states and the federal government as the administration of President Donald Trump upends domestic energy policy, shutting down some wind energy projects while pushing fossil fuels. It has also raised questions about the...
How the USMNT went from embarrassment in Italy to ...
As the FIFA World Cup arrives on North American shores this month, confidence in the U.S. men's national team has never been higher. Mauricio Pochettino's team is littered with UEFA Champions League regulars, stars who have lifted trophies across Europe's Big Five leagues, and champions of this country's domestic league. But American soccer's outlook wasn't always so rosy.
Haunted zoo on fortified island forced to close after monkeys escape and terrorise beach
Haunted zoo on fortified island forced to close after monkeys escape and terrorise beach St Catherine's Island zoo near Tenby closed permanently after primates escaped the Napoleonic fortress and caused chaos on the local beach A strange zoo on a fortified island, accessible only during low tide, housed 100 animals, including a troop of mischievous monkeys and the ghosts of its former military occupants. Christopher and Marion Batt discovered the Napoleonic fortress on St Catherine's Island,...
Sarah was amused by the quicksand she stepped in on a South Australian beach. Then ‘reality set in’
Joy turned to panic as Sarah and her dog sank quickly. She thought ‘this is not how I’m going to go’Get our breaking news email, free app or daily news podcast“I’ve literally had my real, live Indiana Jones moment,” Sarah Darbyshire says of the frightening moment she and her dog stumbled into quicksand. The Holdfast Bay council has put up signs warning about the treacherous, liquefied patch on Glenelg North beach in South Australia.
No Glastonbury, no problem: Here are eight European music festivals you can still book this summer
Most of Europe's music festivals have sold out, but there are plenty you can still get tickets for across the continent. Primavera Sound is already in the rear-view mirror. Glastonburyis taking 2026 off for one of its regular fallow years.
Quicksand causes terrifying ‘Indiana Jones moment’ for second Adelaide beachgoer
Days after a young Adelaide beachgoer had to be rescued from quicksand, a second person had a similar experience along the same stretch of coast. Sarah Darbyshire was walking at Glenelg North on Saturday afternoon when her dog began to sink into the sand, and she started to do the same. The Department for Environment and Water says sand carting occurs at the beach every year to protect local infrastructure.
A father-son Transatlantic, cross-generational voyage to visit Burnley
From the book LEGS HEARTS MINDS: Loss and Its Remedies by Chris Jones. Copyright © 2026 by Chris Jones.
NASCAR's scariest wreck in years rocks garage, Earnhardt saves another one & Bubba Wallace lectures young star
I've done this 'racin deal for a long time, as Darrell Waltrip (D-Dubya!) would say. I've watched a lot of NASCAR races. Covered a lot of Daytona 500s.
From the Octagon to the Oval office: White, Trump and a 25-year friendship
THE 28TH INSTALLMENT of the Ultimate Fighting Championship was a trial run. Though 36 states had banned the UFC, the New Jersey State Athletic Control Board allowed the then-owner, Semaphore Entertainment Group, to host its first sanctioned event on Nov. 17, 2000, at the Taj Mahal in Atlantic City, a hotel and casino owned by real estate mogul Donald Trump. Fighter Randy Couture returned to the UFC for the first time since 1997 and recaptured his heavyweight championship against Kevin...
Trump Thinks His Administration Is ‘Like Pirates’
This is an edition of The Atlantic Daily, a newsletter that guides you through the biggest stories of the day, helps you discover new ideas, and recommends the best in culture. The U.S. Navy was born to fight piracy. After the Revolutionary War, the United States maintained no standing fleet, but attacks by the Barbary pirates—corsairs based in North Africa who preyed on American merchant ships and took sailors ransom—drove Congress to reestablish a navy in the 1790s.