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Rains from Tropical Storm Bonnie hit...Storms hit Texas and Kansas...Suspect arrested after deputy shot


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CHARLESTON, S.C. (AP) — Tropical Storm Bonnie is lashing the South Carolina coast with heavy rain and taking the fun out of the first big holiday weekend of the summer season. Top sustained winds reached 45 mph early Sunday morning. Heavy rain and dangerous surf kept people off the Georgia, South Carolina and southern North Carolina beaches on Saturday. Forecasters say the biggest concern is locally heavy rain.

HOUSTON (AP) — Two people are still missing in Texas and one in Kansas after torrential rain flooded rivers and washed out roads. In Texas, officials say four people died. The search for an 11-year-old boy who was swept away in Kansas is considered a recovery operation and will resume at daybreak. Some voluntary evacuations have been implemented in Texas.

ATLANTA (AP) — One suspect is under arrest in Georgia after the wounding of a sheriff's deputy during a traffic stop about 80 miles south of Atlanta. The deputy was shot in the face and is hospitalized. Police said earlier there were three men in the car that was pulled over. The investigation continues.

WASHINGTON (AP) — A federal judge has rejected assertions from lawyers that Trump University internal documents sought in a class-action suit still have commercial value. U.S. District Judge Gonzalo Curiel has ordered that the documents be released by Thursday. The lawsuit claims Trump University's nationwide seminars and classes were like infomercials and pressured students to buy more but didn't deliver as promised.

BEIJING (AP) — Older women are the driving force behind a spike in demand for fertility treatments since China's decision to allow all married couples to have two children. The rise in in vitro fertilization points to the deferred dreams of many parents who long wanted a second child, but were prevented by a strict, 30-year-old population control policy. Fertility treatments themselves were a little-discussed, sensitive matter.

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