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- [[Los Angeles Times]]
- War with Iran widens; Europe allies aid U.S.
- Trump vows to select Tehran’s next leader; House rejects reining in president’s authority
- RESIDENTS of Beirut’s suburbs flee after the Israeli army told them to “evacuate your homes immediately.”
- President fires embattled Noem as DHS secretary
- Trump says he will replace her with GOP Sen. Markwayne Mullin of Oklahoma.
- BEFORE her dismissal, Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem faced a grilling from lawmakers.
- Israel attacks, Beirut area a war zone
- Paramount deal stokes job fears at CNN, CBS News
- No thinning out in governor’s race
- Democratic Party head’s call for some candidates to bow out goes unheeded.
- Town scarred by day of terror
- Etzatlán, Mexico, picks up pieces and seeks answers after retaliatory attacks for killing of ‘El Mencho’
- War with Iran widens; Europe allies aid U.S.
- [[USA Today]]
- Following a dream, from ‘trailer girl’ to country superstar
- Lainey Wilson built career with fire and faith, ‘brick by brick’
- When Lainey Wilson was 9 years old, she wrote a song called “Lucky Me.” ● She still remembers every word. ● That same year, she got her first pair of bellbottoms, her first horse and her first glimpse of the stage that would indelibly shape her future: the Grand Ole Opry. ● “My mom and daddy brought me to Nashville when I was 9 years old,” Wilson says on a video call from Brisbane, Australia. “I just remember going to the Opry and watching Bill Anderson, Crystal Gayle, Phil Vassar, Little Jimmy Dickens, and I just thought, ‘Man, I want to be part of this community.’ I felt like I kind of already was. I just needed to try to convince everybody else that I was, too.”
- ABOVE: Lainey Wilson, a USA TODAY Women of the Year honoree, performs around the world, including in Brisbane, Australia.
- About the Women of the Year project
- USA TODAY’s Women of the Year is a recognition of women who have made a significant impact in their communities and across the country.
- Trump’s actions scramble doctrine
- Venezuela, Iran open ‘uncharted territory’
- Explosions rock Tehran on March 2 after the United States and Israel attacked Iran.
- Cursive handwriting making its big comeback
- More states mandating skill be taught in schools
- A growing number of U.S. schools are returning to teaching cursive handwriting.
- Following a dream, from ‘trailer girl’ to country superstar
- [[The New York Times]]
- After Evacuation Order Unsettles Beirut, Israel Begins Bomb Campaign Near City
- Trump Seeks Say on Next Leader in Tehran
- LEBANON A highway in the Dahiya, on Beirut’s outskirts, after Israel issued an evacuation order.
- TEHRAN Azadi Stadium, which hosted Frank Sinatra and big soccer matches, was hit by an attack.
- ISRAEL Family members looked over the damage to their home Thursday after a missile barrage.
- TRUMP FIRES NOEM AS CHIEF OF D.H.S. AFTER ROCKY TERM
- Criticism Over Handling Ad Contracts — Senator Is Named as Replacement
- Kristi Noem is the first cabinet member to be ousted in the president’s second term.
- Wielding Emergency Orders, Justices Leapfrog State Courts
- NEWS ANALYSIS
- Fight Over Climate Law Looms As New York Energy Costs Soar
- ‘AVALANCHE!’
- An Explosion of Snow, Ice and Debris, Then Came Calls for Help
- After Evacuation Order Unsettles Beirut, Israel Begins Bomb Campaign Near City
- [[Wall Street Journal]]
- Pentagon Races to Secure Cash For Iran Operations, Munitions
- Requests to Congress and push to boost weapons production explored
- A building in Beirut’s suburbs was reduced to rubble on Thursday during waves of Israeli strikes that also hit Tehran.
- https://www.wsj.com/politics/national-security/pentagon-races-to-secure-money-for-iran-operations-munitions-277d0293?st=o1QSxn&reflink=desktopwebshare_permalink
- High Schools Are Losing Fight Against Pot—Even During Class
- Legalization makes marijuana culturally acceptable and easy to get for underage students; ‘it was a party in the bathroom’
- https://www.wsj.com/us-news/education/marijuana-high-schools-legalization-vaping-642fe29d?st=rbgHFP&reflink=desktopwebshare_permalink
- With Fewer Weapons, Iran’s Strikes Decline But Targets Broaden
- Firms Rush Shipments After Ruling on Tariffs
- Trump Removes Noem as Homeland Secretary
- Testimony at hearing enraged president; Sen. Mullin is picked for the position
- https://www.wsj.com/politics/policy/trump-dhs-kristi-noem-markwayne-mullin-85815862?st=zcYEnQ&reflink=desktopwebshare_permalink
- Taylor Swift Tests Her Powers on a London Eyesore
- Drab mall started getting rave reviews after pop star’s music video
- https://www.wsj.com/arts-culture/music/taylor-swift-opalite-croydon-whitgift-london-shopping-mall-f10b8c85?st=Xm2RDE&reflink=desktopwebshare_permalink
- Surge in Oil Prices Hits Stocks
- U.S. crude futures rose 8.5% on Thursday, the biggest one-day percentage gain since 2020. The surge sent stocks lower, extending moves that have rippled through the markets.
- https://www.wsj.com/finance/stocks/oil-prices-surge-stocks-fall-on-widening-iran-war-75aad9a7?st=zLVWEN&reflink=desktopwebshare_permalink
- Pentagon Races to Secure Cash For Iran Operations, Munitions
- [[Financial Times]] 영국에 위치한 니케이 소유 회사입니다.
- US to tap Ukraine for Iran interceptors
- ▸ Pentagon sets sights on cheaper drones from Kyiv ▸ Stockpile of expensive Patriot missiles declines ▸ Zelenskyy confirms UAE and Qatar defence-led talks ▸ Tehran’s Shahed weapons versatile and easy to conceal
- Israel and the US bombarded Tehran for a sixth straight day. Iran’s death toll reached 1,230
- Europe-to-Asia flights squeezed after attack forces Azerbaijan to close route
- Air travel between Europe and Asia has been squeezed into a narrow corridor just 50 miles across after a drone attack on Azerbaijan closed the country’s southern airspace.
- Citi internal security unit faces ‘hit squad’ criticism
- An internal division of the Wall Street bank that boasts ex-law enforcement officials equipped to take on serious cases of wrongdoing is facing criticism from staff over the way it is deployed. Some said statements to CSIS were used against them, and two said they were forced out, claims that Citi denies. ‘Citi’s CSIS operates as HR’s internal hit squad, highly trained to protect the firm at employees’ expense,’ a staff member who sued the bank said.
- US to tap Ukraine for Iran interceptors