Good Morning Australia! - Bronwyn Bishop is out as House Speaker - Zimbabwe says a second American killed a protected Lion - New debris could be linked to MH370, or maybe it's just junk - Chaos at Calais - Cilla Black dies - And much more in your CareerSpotWorld News Briefs:

Bronwyn Bishop has stepped down as House Speaker, following three weeks of severe criticism of the questionable travel expenses she charged to Australian taxpayers.  "I have today (Sunday) written to the Governor-General and tendered my resignation as Speaker of the House of Representatives effective immediately," Brownwyn said in a statement.  "I have not taken this decision lightly, however it is because of my love and respect for the institution of Parliament and the Australian people that I have resigned as Speaker."  Although it was Ms. Bishop's expenses that became the public brand of entitlement abuse, PM Tony Abbott says the entire system needs an overhaul.  "We have a situation where spending is arguably inside the rules, but plainly outside of community expectations, and that's what needs to be dealt with once and for all."

Investigators are interested in two more chunks of "metallic debris" that washed ashore on Reunion island, the French Indian Ocean territory where beachcombers more than likely found a piece of the wing of Malaysian Airlines Flight MH370.  The new debris appears in photographs to be somewhat damaged, and may not be as easy to identify as the Boeing 777 wing flapperon already sent to Paris for analysis.  Renunion Island sits at the west end of the Indian Ocean Gyre that, in theory, could take debris from the main search area off western Australia across the vast sea as it spins counter-clockwise.

The pilot was killed in the crash of a Russian helicopter at an arms show 170 kilometers south of Moscow.  Video caught the old Soviet-designed Mi-28 spinning out of control and crashing into the Dubrovichi firing range in Ryazan. The surviving copilot says the hydraulic system failed.

Police in Calais, France used pepper spray to turn back hundreds of migrants who tried to storm the entrance to the Channel Tunnel.  The migrants, mostly from impoverished and war-torn countries in sub-Saharan African and the Middle East, try to hitch rides on freight trains or trucks making the 50-kilometer crossing from France to the UK.  One migrant was fatally crushed by a truck last week, nine have died since the start of June.

One of the six people stabbed by an ultra-Orthodox Jewish attacker at Jerusalem's Gay Pride Parade last week has died.  16-year old Shira Banki was hospitalized with serious wounds immedidately after Thursday's attack, but in the end doctors were unable to save her.  Police arrested Yishai Schlissel at the scene.  He had just recently been released from prison for a similar attack at the 2005 Gay Parade.  Thousands of Israelis turned out at demonstrations over the weekend to denounce both the Gay Parade attack, and the arson at a Palestinian home that killed an 18-month old baby boy and left his parents and four-year old brothers seriously burned.  Jewish extremists are suspected in the latter attack.

A suicide attack killed two Turkish soldiers and left another 31 wounded in the eastern part of the country near the Iran border.  Authorities claim a Kurdish PKK fighter drove a tractor laden with explosives up to a military police station near the town of Dogubayezit in Agri province at set it off.  The PKK has not commented.  Since 24 July, Turkey has carried out bombing raids at Kurdish positions in Syria and Iraq, which the Kurds say have killed civilians.

An Egyptian court again delayed the verdict in the retrial of three Al Jazeera journalists accused of aiding the outlawed Muslim Brotherhood by reporting on the crackdown following the ouster of Islamist president Muhammed Morsi.  Aussie Peter Greste and two colleagues were originally found guilty, but that earlier decision was overturned and a retrial ordered.  The case has exposed Egypt's courts as chaotic and incompetent, and has proven an embarassment to President Adbel Fattah Al-Sisi.  The new date for the verdicts is 29 August.

Zimbabwean authorities have identified a second American bowhunter who allegedly poached a lion from just outside the perimeter of Hwange National Park.  He is identified as Jan Casimir Seski of Murraysville, Pennsylvania, and the hunt took place in April - three months prior to the killing of Cecil, a celebrated male Lion who brought millions of tourist dollars to the local economy.  A local landowner is assisting police in the Seski case.  last week, Zimbabwe began the process of requesting the US extradite Walter Palmer, the Minnesota dentist who killed Cecil.

A Mexican photojournalist has been found shot to death in a Mexico City apartment, not long after fleeing Veracruz state because of harrassment from unknown individuals.  Ruben Espinoza worked for the investigative maagzine Proceso.  At least eleven journalists have been killed in veracruz in the past few years.

Singer and TV star Cilla Black is dead at age 72, in her home in Estepona, Spain in the Costa del Sol region.  The Liverpool native was a coatchecker at the Cavern Club where The Beatles used to play prior to their worldwide fame, and John Lennon and Paul McCartney are credited with writing her first hit "Love Of The Loved".  That was quickly followed by "Anyone Who Had A Heart", the first of eleven top ten singles.  She later hosted TV shows like the long-running "Blind Date" and "Surprise Surprise".

Doggies go surfing at Imperial Beach, California.