Here are the latest headlines and updates on tampabay.com.

A long line snaked around the Armature Works on 1910 N. Ola Ave for an 11 a.m. rally for a rally where Bernie Sanders, the Independent Senator from Vermont and the darling of the left, stumped for Tallahassee Mayor Andrew Gillum's bid for Florida governor. Sanders and Gillum appeared together four days after the start of early voting in Hillsborough County and a day after Tampa Mayor Bob Buckhorn officially endorsed former Congresswoman Gwen Graham.

Red Tide hits Florida on a regular basis, but rarely is one of the algae blooms as deadly as this year's. Already declared the worst in a decade, it's killed a dozen dolphins, scores of manatees, hundreds of sea turtles and untold thousands of fish. Why is this year's bloom so bad? The Sahara Desert may be to blame.

Florida's three Safeways are handing their keys over to Publix, which will reopen the stores under its signature green banner this fall. In Florida, it always comes back to Publix. And the competitors that try to beat Publix at its own game? Well, they historically get burned. Floridians at large love the grocery chain "where shopping is a pleasure." It makes it tough on competitors — whether they're new or old to the market.

The Rays are just good enough not to be a Have Not, but not good enough to be a Have, sports columnist Martin Fennelly writes. They lack consistency. Not a crime for this young a bunch, but it manifests itself, allowing ups and downs that keep three games over .500 from turning into 10 games over .500 and a righteous pursuit of even the second AL wild card. Next week would be a good week to make a decision, to add some spice to this season.

"Bill Graham and the Rock & Roll Revolution" is a very different kind of exhibit for the Florida Holocaust Museum, almost certainly its most pop-culture-focused ever. Spanning an entire floor, it brings together hundreds of family artifacts, including photographs, documents, memorabilia, multimedia clips and a psychedelic light installation, to pay tribute to Graham, who from the '60s until his death in 1991 changed the live music industry as much as any man. Why is the Holocaust Museum hosting an exhibit that looks like a wing at the Hard Rock? Start with this: Graham, born Wolfgang Wolodia Grajonca to Russian Jews living in Berlin, was a Holocaust survivor.

Sign up for our News at Noon email newsletter here