
Good news: Neighbors thank UPS driver after 32 years of service

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NBC News
21 hours ago
- NBC News
Pope Leo XIV celebrates mass in biggest event since conclave
Pope Leo XIV celebrated mass on Sunday with more than 1 million young Catholics from around the world, marking the biggest event for the pontiff since he was elected. NBC News' Claudio Lavanga reports from Rome.


Atlantic
2 days ago
- Atlantic
The Powerful Consistency of Mail Delivery
This is an edition of The Wonder Reader, a newsletter in which our editors recommend a set of stories to spark your curiosity and fill you with delight. Sign up here to get it every Saturday morning. After losing his corporate marketing job during the pandemic, Stephen Starring Grant decided to move back home and become a rural mail-carrier associate in Blacksburg, Virginia. His recently published memoir unravels what he learned about Appalachian identity and blue-collar experiences, but also about the power of showing up, every single day. 'In Grant's telling, postal workers bring order and predictability to a country that can feel like it's unraveling, especially during crises that starkly illustrate how reliant we are on the federal bureaucracy,' Tyler Austin Harper writes in a review of the memoir. Today's newsletter looks at how mail carriers do their jobs—even in the most remote parts of the country—and why their work matters. On Mail Delivery Memoir of a Mailman By Tyler Austin Harper A new book describes the challenges and joys of life as a letter carrier. Read the article. How the Most Remote Community in America Gets Its Mail By Sarah Yager Transporting letters and packages to the village of Supai requires a feat of logistics, horsemanship, and carefully placed hooves. Read the article. The Quiet Heroism of Mail Delivery By Mara Wilson After a natural disaster, courier services such as USPS and UPS help communities return to a sense of normalcy. (From 2019) Still Curious? When you give a tree an email address: The city of Melbourne assigned trees email addresses so citizens could report problems such as dangerous branches. Instead, people wrote thousands of love letters to their favorite trees, Adrienne LaFrance wrote in 2015. The endangered art of letter writing: In 1981, Belinda struck up a conversation with a stranger on a ferry. Nearly 40 years later, she and that stranger, Julie, still write each other physical letters multiple times a year. Other Diversions P.S. I recently asked readers to share a photo of something that sparks their sense of awe in the world. 'On a rare sunny day during this season's rainy May and June, I picked up a red rose that had been dropped on the sidewalk,' Jane Stahl, 78, from Boyertown, Pennsylvania, writes. 'I enjoyed this single bloom on my kitchen windowsill, reminding me that sometimes it's the little things that provide joy on cloudy days, beauties that inspire us to look for more of them in our travels. And, indeed, that's what happened. During the rest of my walk that morning, I saw roses everywhere and 'brought them home' via my phone's camera to share with friends and remind me to look for those little things.'


NBC News
28-07-2025
- NBC News
Passengers flee smoking American Airlines jet in Denver after aborted takeoff
Passengers evacuated an American Airlines jet at Denver International Airport on emergency slides after the landing gear caught fire during an aborted takeoff, sending black smoke billowing into the air. One of the 173 passengers was hospitalized with minor injuries while exiting the Boeing 737 MAX 8 that had been due to fly to Miami International Airport on Saturday, according to officials. A video shared with NBC News by a passenger, who wished to remain anonymous, showed the aircraft gathering speed on the runway — before a loud bang was heard followed by strong vibrations and the plane stopping. Meanwhile a round piece of debris was seen rolling from underneath the plane and off the side of the runway. "I heard a loud boom so I knew something blew up under the plane," passenger Mark Tsurkis told NBC News. "I said, 'That's not good,' and right away the captain started slowing the plane down. Then somebody said, 'Look!' So we looked on the left side, in the window, and we see one of the wheels of the plane" rolling away. Once the aircraft came to a halt, Tsurkis said, he started to smell burning. "Somebody screamed, 'Fire!,'" he said. "So they opened up the emergency doors and we slid down on those inflatable slides." Five people were checked by medics at the scene and one was taken to the hospital, the airline said. Other passengers received criticism online after videos showed them carrying cabin bags while leaving the burning aircraft. 'Remember, during emergency evacuations, it's important for passengers to follow crew instructions,' Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy wrote on X. 'Leave your luggage behind!' This has become such an endemic problem — passengers stopping to get their bags during emergencies — that the Federal Aviation Administration carried out a study published in December. Though there were several recommendations, the conclusion was clear: "Passenger retrieval of baggage slows down an evacuation." American Airlines said its flight 3023 experienced 'a maintenance issue' involving 'an aircraft tire' before takeoff at around 2:45 p.m. It said the passengers and six crew members had all left the plane 'safely' and that the aircraft was taken out of service to be inspected by the airline's engineers. 'We thank our team members for their professionalism and apologize to our customers for their experience,' it said, adding that passengers were due to take another flight to Miami later the same day. The FAA said it would investigate.