안녕하세요.
질문이 있으시거나 수정할 내용 발견하시면 댓글에 적어주세요.
감사합니다.
- [[Los Angeles Times]]
- Emerging deal would provide Iran with major concessions
- U.S. claims strait is open for good. Tehran says it may shut it again, impose tolls.
- RESIDENTS wave a flag picturing Hezbollah’s leader while returning to Zefta, Lebanon, as a ceasefire began.
- Angelenos’ outlook turns glum
- In an annual UCLA survey, L.A. County residents’ view of their quality of life reaches its lowest point in a decade
- California’s high gas prices push gig drivers off the road
- D4vd is arrested in killing of teen
- Redefining the donor state
- In their bid to flip the Senate, Californians pour money into Democratic campaigns elsewhere
- A Rolls, a bear suit and a car insurance ripoff
- Ex-Angels slugger dies
- Garret Anderson, the even-keeled outfielder who hit a key double in Game 7 of the 2002 World Series, suffers a heart attack at 53.
- Emerging deal would provide Iran with major concessions
- [[USA Today]]
- LEBANESE RETURN HOME
- Ceasefire between Hezbollah, Israel mostly holds
- Women react as displaced people make their way back home in Qasmiyeh, Lebanon, on April 17.
- People make their way back to their homes as they cross a bridge linking southern Lebanon to the rest of the country, which was hit earlier in an Israeli strike, in Qasmiyeh, Lebanon, on April 17.
- Firms set for tariff refunds
- Government prepares to launch claim process
- Jason Cheung, CEO of toymaker Huntar Co., said he has “no concerns” about ultimately getting a successful tariff refund.
- A new, forceful Pope Leo steps onto the world stage
- Rhetoric used on Africa tour has riled Trump
- In Africa, Pope Leo XIV warned that the whims of the world’s richest threaten peace.
- LEBANESE RETURN HOME
- [[The New York Times]]
- Iran Opens Key Strait, Trump and Tehran Say, Lifting Hopes for Peace
- But U.S. Signals Its Blockade Isn’t Over
- Riding through a devastated suburb of Beirut, Lebanon.
- Thousands of displaced families clogged roads in Lebanon to travel back to their homes on Friday, after a cease-fire was announced.
- Envoy Five Years Out of College Leading Cultural War in Europe
- Trump Pick Courts Far Right, Disrupting Ties to Establishment
- Cease-Fire in Lebanon Sends Thousands on Uneasy Return
- Braving Gridlock and Ruin, but They ‘Just Want to Be Back’
- Stopping Drug Traffickers: A Frustrating Game of ‘Whac-a-Mole’
- A Colombian coca field. Despite President Trump’s smuggling crackdown, cartels are finding new ways to meet record demand.
- Preserving a 1,200-Year Archive Of When Cherry Trees Blossom
- Japanese Data Is Key to New Climate Studies
- Iran Opens Key Strait, Trump and Tehran Say, Lifting Hopes for Peace
- [[Wall Street Journal]]
- U.S. and Iran Signal Easing Of Tensions
- Children gesture from a vehicle Friday near Tyre, Lebanon, as displaced people make their way back to their homes after a 10-day cease-fire between Lebanon and Israel took effect.
- Altman’s Investments Raise Conflict Concerns at OpenAI
- Abel Puts Stamp on Berkshire In 100 Days
- In Florida, Billionaires Open Their Own Schools
- Padres Near Sale Deal For Record $3.9 Billion
- People Who Listen to Podcasts Are Suddenly Feeling Left Out
- Industry’s embrace of video means if you’re not watching, you’re lost; ‘Who? What?’
- Parched States Find Lifeline
- Drought-plagued states are turning to San Diego for water in a dramatic turnaround. After the California city suffered a five-year drought that ended in 1992, the county water authority invested billions to achieve water independence. As supplies grew, residents cut water use by nearly 50% over the past quarter-century, turning San Diego into a water exporter.
- U.S. and Iran Signal Easing Of Tensions
- [[Financial Times]] 영국에 위치한 니케이 소유 회사입니다.
- Oil tumbles as Hormuz strait opens
- ▸ Benchmark down 11% ▸ Stocks advance ▸ Trump says deal near ▸ No US-Iran talks scheduled
- Luxury labels cut their cloth
- A Gucci model at this year’s Milan Fashion Week.
- OnlyFans to surpass $3bn valuation with stake sale after death of founder
- OnlyFans, the UK streaming platform used by sex workers, is nearing a deal to sell a minority stake that would value the business at more than $3bn after its owner died last month.
- Hotels slash summer rates as World Cup fans shun US
- Anti-American sentiment is among the reasons cited by US hotels for slashing rates for the World Cup. Prices in host cities including Miami, San Francisco and Philadelphia have come down by a third as chains admit their hopes of a visitor influx were ‘not materialising’ in the face of unease over the Iran war and visa policy. Meanwhile, Eagle Point Credit has boosted financing to Sports Illustrated Tickets to fund a bid to buy then resell tickets at huge mark-ups.
- Oil tumbles as Hormuz strait opens