Hello, Australia! - Daylight reveals incredible destruction after the blast in Tianjin, China, as the death toll rises - Jimmy Carter reveals a trobling medical diagnosis - And more in your CareerSpot Global News Briefs:

At least 60 people were killed and 200 wounded in a truck bombing at a crowded marketplace in the Sadr City section of Baghdad, Iraq.  There was no initial claim of responsibility, but Islamic State has attacked the Shiite enclave several times in the past.

Chinese state media says the warehouse that blew up in Tianjin was a store house for dangerous materials.  That much was evident when at least two huge blasts and several smaller explosions rang through the port city of 7.5 million people, leaving utter devastation in the aftermath.  The shockwaves blew clear through big buildings, shattering windows on all sides; tossed shipping containers around like toys; torched what appeared to be acres of new cars waiting to ship overseas.  Fire raged for at least 12 hours after the explosions.  CCTV caught some poor guy standing in front of some glass doors when the shock wave hit.

What's apparent is that several people are dead because of the blasts.  State owned media says 44 people are dead including twelve firefighters.  36 Firefighters are also missing.  But there were also worker dormitories within the blast zone; many of the port and factory workers come from poor rural areas, and simply have to live where they work.  Even buildings that weren't all that close were damaged.  Hospitals were overwhelmed with hundreds of people wounded by flying glass shards and debris.  It seems likely that the death and injury tolls would rise.

Former US President Jimmy Carter says he has cancer.  "Recent liver surgery revealed that I have cancer that now is in other parts of my body," the 90-year old said in a statement.  "I will be rearranging my schedule as necessary so I can undergo treatment by physicians at Emory Healthcare," referring to the University in Atlanta.  Since leaving the White House in 1081, Jimmy Carter formed The Carter Center as a base from which he has negotiated numerous international treaties, promoted democracy and monitored elections across the globe, and promoted numerous health initiatives.  His most recent success was reducing the world's total cases of River Blindness from several million to just a couple of hundred, eliminating the parasitic disease in most tropical developing countries.

Greece's parliament meets later today to approve the latest bailout agreement.  But former finance minister Yanis Varoufakis is already pouring cold water all over it, saying it can't work.  And Germany's finance ministry is reportedly concerned with Athens' unsustainable debt.

Police in Minneapolis, Minnesota says up to four people were hurt when the ceiling caved in at the legendary First Avenue club, from which artists like Prince, Husker Du, and The Replacements launched their careers.  In fact, it featured prominently in Prince's movie "Purple Rain".  Over the years, the renovated bus station hosted everyone from Joe Cocker to Wilson Picket, from U2 to Gwar.  The cave-in occured during a performance by Theory of a Deadman, which I've never heard of but apparently is pretty successful.  Building inspectors will now determine if the place is stable.