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Photos of global celebrations marking the start of the summer and winter solstices

Photos of global celebrations marking the start of the summer and winter solstices

People are marking the start of the winter and summer solstices across the globe. North of the equator, celebrations welcome summer, while those in the south observe the beginning of winter.
In Romania, dancers wearing crowns of wheat gathered for the Sanziene, or 'Fairies,' a pre-Christian, pagan celebration in honor of the tiny, imaginary winged beings who come to earth as a symbol of fertility. Meanwhile, Lithuanians danced in the small town of Kernave and Russians lit bonfires.
In the U.S., a performer danced across the colors of Christopher Janey's 'Passing Light' solar sculpture that aligns each Summer Solstice at the San Antonio airport. In Spain, people watched the sun rise on a Barcelona beach, coined 'The Night of San Juan.'
South of the equator in Bolivia, Indigenous people gathered around fires and held up their hands to receive the first rays of sunlight in celebration of the Andean New Year of 5533, marking the Southern Hemisphere's winter solstice.
This is a photo gallery curated by AP photo editors.
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Flaco Jiménez, Global Tejano Music Ambassador, Dead at 86
Flaco Jiménez, Global Tejano Music Ambassador, Dead at 86

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Flaco Jiménez, Global Tejano Music Ambassador, Dead at 86

Flaco Jiménez, the legendary accordion player who was perhaps the foremost ambassador for regional Tejano music in the 20th century, died at 86 on July 31st. According to a statement, Jiménez died surrounded by his family. 'His legacy will live on through his music and all of his fans,' it read. Throughout his career, Jiménez served as a global emissary of conjunto, the 18th-century regional genre born in Texas that merged traditional Mexican music with the accordion-driven polka music from German immigrants. 'What Elvis Presley was to rock, Muddy Waters to blues…Charlie Parker to Jazz,' wrote the Chicago-Tribune in 1992, 'Flaco Jiménez is to Tex-Mex (also known as conjunto or norteño) music.' More from Rolling Stone Jeannie Seely, Razor-Sharp Country Singer Known as 'Miss Country Soul,' Dead at 85 Tom Lehrer, Influential Song Satirist With a Cult Following, Dead at 97 Hulk Hogan, Wrestling Superstar Turned Right-Wing Hero, Dead at 71 Jiménez took pride in expanding, tweaking, and presenting the genre he grew steeped in as a child to the worlds and genres far from the San Antonio of his youth. 'I would consider myself,' Jiménez once said, 'one of the first ones who started sharing cultures.' Throughout his 70-year career, Jiménez brought his accordion playing to a variety of genres through his collaborations with everyone from Doug Sahm, Linda Ronstadt, Ry Cooder, the Rolling Stones, Buck Owens, and Dwight Yoakam. 'The versatility of Tex-Mex is what makes it,' Jiménez told the Chicago Tribune. 'We play Cajun, we play rock and roll, we play country, we play blues. What comes to our minds to do, to have fun with. I like to share our cultures.' Leonardo Jiménez was born on March 11, 1939. Like his professional accordionist father before him, as a child he took on the nickname of 'Flaco' (skinny) due to his slight frame. Jiménez grew up immersed in norteño and conjunto music, and in addition to his father, he soon became enamored with accordion players like Valerio Longoria, Narciso Martínez, and Juan Lopez. By the age of 12, Jiménez was playing accordion, the instrument with which he would become synonymous for the remainder of his career. 'I like to make my accordion yell and scream and make it happy,' Jiménez said of his trademark instrument. Jiménez began gigging and singing on the local radio with his teenage band Los Caporales with Henry Zimmerle and Joe Ponce. The band name was one Jiménez would revisit throughout his career, eventually repurposing it as a duo with bajo sexto legend Fred Ojeda. 'When I record under my style, Flaco Jiménez, it's flashier, it's more modern,' Jiménez said in 2012 after reuniting his iteration of Los Caporales with Ojeda. 'This is the old style.' But Jiménez always wanted to transcend the confines of the regional San Antonio scene in which he grew up. 'I wanted to cross over,' he told Texas Highways. 'And I got lucky.' Sometime in the late Sixties or early Seventies, Jiménez began playing with Doug Sahm, the frontman of the Texas rock band the Sir Douglas Quintet. The collaboration changed the trajectory of both musicians' careers, and resulted, many years later, in the forming of the Texas Tornados, the beloved, Grammy-winning Tejano supergroup featuring Jiménez, Sahm, Augie Meyers, and Freddy Fender. Jiménez recorded a number of albums throughout the Seventies and Eighties, many of them for San Antonio's D.L.B. Records as well as the California-based roots label Arhoolie. 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Boy injured in rare octopus incident at Texas aquarium
Boy injured in rare octopus incident at Texas aquarium

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Boy injured in rare octopus incident at Texas aquarium

An octopus at the San Antonio Aquarium left a six-year-old boy with 'hickeys' covering his arm after the child reached into a touch tank, and the sea animal wouldn't let go. The boy's mom, Britney Taryn, has gone viral in a series of TikToks – two of which have garnered over 3 million views – after sharing how a giant Pacific octopus named Cthulhu latched onto her son Leo's arm during their July 14 visit. She said they visit often and had touched the octopus before without incident. Taryn shared glimpses of Leo's arm, decorated with dark purple solution cup bruises from his wrist to his armpit. "He started saying, 'Mom, it's not letting me go,'" Taryn said in one video, adding that it took three adults to remove the animals from the youngster's arm. The San Antonio Aquarium responded indirectly to the incident by posting two videos shortly after Taryn's posts gained popularity. In a TikTok on July 23, an aquarium employee explained that giant Pacific Octopuses have been known to use their suction cups to move objects up to 700 pounds. 'If you look around, this whole tank is open, okay?' the employee said of Cthulhu's larger-than-recommended 1,000-gallon tank. 'A lot of times you will go to an aquarium and it will be completely enclosed, and it's enclosed because these guys are expert problem solvers, and they're known to escape.' 'We have never had an octopus escape,' she claimed. 'We make them very, very happy. They have a lot of toys, enrichment, and problem-solving activities. We also give them a very mixed diet, a nutritious diet, and they realize that this is a great place.' The video ends with Cthulhu giving the employee some 'tough love' by latching onto her arm. The adult was able to remove the 'very strong' animal by herself, but Taryn was less than impressed by the clip. 'Now, imagine that that is a six-year-old,' she said in response. The aquarium posted another TikTok with Cthulhu and the employee last week, where she shares that octopus bruises aren't harmful and typically fade within seven to 14 days. She said giant Pacific Octopuses have around 200 suction cups per arm. 'She loves people, so she gets so excited sometimes, especially if it's food time, and she's trying to pry open my hand to get the shrimp,' the employee said, holding the crustacean. 'She's so intelligent. She has this giant beak. She could bite me if she really wanted to. I'm not her food source, but this is her food source, and she has a great time trying to get a hold of it. 'So with that, all this suction motion sometimes will create hickeys. We call them octopus kisses, but they're bruises, and it's basically where red blood comes up to the surface of your skin. She's not trying to be harmful in any manner.' The employee concluded, 'Suction marks are actually common and normal for strong, inquisitive animals like her. I promise it's not a cosmic cry for help.' Taryn's videos have sparked debate about the safety of kids interacting with animals like octopuses. While she hasn't called the incident an attack and has since revisited the octopus with Leo, she said they were never warned about potential risks. She's using social media to caution others and advocate for better animal care. Taryn has asked the San Antonio Aquarium to document the incident and explain their safety protocols, but says she hasn't received a response. The Independent has contacted the San Antonio Aquarium for comment. Solve the daily Crossword

In pictures: Thousands turn out for Pride parade
In pictures: Thousands turn out for Pride parade

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In pictures: Thousands turn out for Pride parade

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