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- [[Los Angeles Times]]
- Tunnel fire shuts down 110 at Port of L.A.
- Northbound lanes are closed indefinitely. Items in encampment may be acting as fuel.
- THE CAUSE of the fire is being investigated, though the mayor’s office has tied it to a homeless encampment.
- U.S. shifts from offense to hope of an Iran deal
- Rubio says Operation Epic Fury ‘is over,’ a step toward reopening the Strait of Hormuz.
- Gridlock grips Yosemite after end to reservations
- People face long lines even before summer crush
- Feds target LAUSD over sex allegations
- Agency investigates ‘reassignment’ of teachers. District says policy misinterpreted.
- Tom Steyer tries to sell voters on his own personal change
- Tony nominees
- Nicholas Christopher gets a nod for “Chess,” above, as Lea Michele is shut out. “Lost Boys,” “Schmigadoon!” lead noms.
- Injured L.A. ‘No Kings’ protesters seek justice
- Tunnel fire shuts down 110 at Port of L.A.
- [[USA Today]]
- Third-country deportations face scrutiny
- Under Trump, migrants are sent to places where they have no ties
- Pheap Rom thought he was being transferred to another detention center when he saw “Eswatini” on his paperwork last fall. ● Instead, the 43-year-old Cambodian refugee was put on a plane to the small African kingdom and held for months in a maximum-security prison, where he had no legal status, no charges against him and little ability to challenge his confinement. ● With that imprisonment, Rom joined a growing number of migrants caught in a broader shift in U.S. deportation policy. Over the last year, the Trump administration has dramatically expanded a little-known tactic of sending migrants to countries where they have no ties. Critics say this outsources detention to foreign governments − often with records of human rights abuses, minimal oversight and unclear legal protections.
- Cambodian refugee Pheap Rom was held for months in a maximum-security prison in Eswatini, Africa, and eventually returned to Phnom Penh in March.
- Online betting scandals stack up
- Congress pressed to set prediction market rules
- Spirit’s departure could lift its rivals
- Expansion opportunity arises; fares may go up
- Out-of-service Spirit Airlines aircraft rest at Phoenix Goodyear Airport in Goodyear, Arizona, on May 2.
- Wanted: Ideas to wipe out an invasion of rogue mussels
- Invasive quagga mussels led this Arizona reservoir to enlist boat owners to help eliminate the pests.
- Third-country deportations face scrutiny
- [[The New York Times]]
- REPUBLICANS SEEK $1 BILLION TO USE FOR A BALLROOM
- CITING SECURITY NEEDS
- Public Money Is Targeted for a Project Billed as Privately Financed
- Little Clarity On Oil Money After Maduro
- Cardón Refinery in Punto Fijo, Venezuela. The oil industry is a core part of the country’s national identity, though decades of plundering have left it deeply corrupted.
- Her Mission: Track Killer That Leaves Few Clues
- THE NEW DRUG WAR
- Orphines Hit the Street
- Israeli Settlers Widen Attacks In West Bank
- Despite Deadly Attacks, the Train Keeps Running
- Separatists have besieged the Jaffer Express, a lifeline in a restive Pakistani province.
- He’s Pro-Climate, but His Firm Was Big on Coal
- Old Ties Haunt Steyer’s Run in California
- F.D.A. Pulled Studies Showing Safety of Vaccines
- No Publication of Covid and Shingles Findings
- REPUBLICANS SEEK $1 BILLION TO USE FOR A BALLROOM
- [[Wall Street Journal]]
- Gulf States Fear U.S. Hesitance To Retaliate Emboldens Iran
- Tehran appears to be testing the limits of Trump’s restraint with hostile moves
- Spirit Air Collapse Paves Way For Fares To Go Up
- Secret Team Rethinks Ford’s Assembly Line
- Automaker is tearing up manufacturing processes to build $30,000 electric truck
- AI’s Stark Choice: Cut Jobs Or Stretch Workforce
- Split emerges among bosses over best use of staff as technology increases efficiency
- Heads of State Meet at the White House
- PRESIDENTS DAY: After ordering the revival Tuesday of the Presidential Physical Fitness Award for schoolchildren, President Trump greets the Racing Presidents—George, Tom, Teddy and Abe—and Screech the eagle, mascots of baseball’s Washington Nationals.
- Your Home Security Camera Is Failing at Common Sense
- AI descriptions are mistaking brake lights for house fires and humans for bears
- Wealth Transfer Sputters
- Financial advisory firms like to talk about a looming event called 'the great wealth transfer,' where the huge and very wealthy baby-boomer generation dies off and their children inherit $110 trillion of wealth. But rather than a sudden windfall, the process may be more of a slow drip.
- Gulf States Fear U.S. Hesitance To Retaliate Emboldens Iran
- [[Financial Times]] 영국에 위치한 니케이 소유 회사입니다.
- Sharp surge in oil prices forecast as global reserves plunge at record pace
- ▸ Stocks fall even as demand collapses ▸ Gloom for summer travel season ▸ ‘Market reckoning coming’
- Sour note over Russian entry
- Artists perform at the Russian pavilion of the Venice Biennale.
- HSBC hurt by $400mn ‘fraud-related’ exposure tied to failed mortgage lender
- HSBC has taken a $400mn “fraudrelated” charge tied to collapsed UK mortgage lender Market Financial Solutions, hitting quarterly profits at Europe’s biggest bank and sending its shares down more than 7 per cent.
- Merz back to square one in bid to keep Trump on side
- Friedrich Merz’s year-long bid to build a working rapport with Donald Trump fell apart in a school hall. The German chancellor’s comments to pupils that Iran was ‘humiliating the US’ were met with wrath. The president hit out at ‘an ineffective’ leader by ordering troop withdrawals from Germany, ditching a missile deployment and threatening to raise tariffs. The reversal, and criticism it has attracted, adds to Merz’s woes as the economy, and his ratings, weaken.
- Sharp surge in oil prices forecast as global reserves plunge at record pace