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- [[Los Angeles Times]]
- U.S. fuel prices altering travel plans
- Americans still expect to take trips but opt for cheaper ones amid inflationary pressures.
- Once shunned, investors gain support in Altadena
- Some are lauded for helping the community rebuild
- HOMES are being built, at top, along Laurel Drive. Above is the burned lot that belongs to Crystal Nerone, who now sees the benefits that investors can provide.
- GOP senators defy Trump on ‘slush fund’
- $1.8-billion pot is last straw for some as they block money for immigration efforts.
- Pratt, on the attack, jolts mayoral race
- Reality TV antagonist turns his personal loss in Palisades fire into a run for office in L.A.
- Cuba warns its citizens to prepare for war
- Amid rising pressure, Rubio says likelihood of ‘peaceful’ accord with nation isn’t high.
- IMAGES of Cuban leaders, including the late Fidel Castro, right, at a government building in Havana.
- The men who gave their lives to stop San Diego mosque assault
- Dire water shortage
- Rings at Lake Powell show how far it has receded as climate change has led to a deficit in Colorado River water for Western states.
- U.S. fuel prices altering travel plans
- [[USA Today]]
- 80 years later, Dutch still tend soldiers’ graves
- Volunteers aim to connect families of fallen Americans
- By 1947, some 18,000 American soldiers had been buried at the Netherlands American Cemetery in Margraten. At the end of World War II, the Dutch shared a simple message: “Leave your boys with us. We will watch over them like our own, forever.” ● They vowed to care for the graves of those who fell while restoring Dutch freedom. In an extraordinary act of gratitude, every single grave had been adopted by local families by Memorial Day 1946. ● The United States repatriated about 10,000 of those remains between 1947 and 1951. About 8,300 graves are remaining, along with 1,700 markers for the missing – 10,000 men, more or less. ● Today, Dutch adopters (and now their children and grandchildren), visit the graves, lay flowers on birthdays and holidays, and learn the soldiers’ stories. ● Of those 10,000, there are 8,411 adopters who still do not know the families of the soldiers they honor. ● With the passage of time, many American descendants are not even aware that a family member is buried at Margraten, and/or that someone has cared for that grave for more than 80 years. ● A group of dedicated volunteers is working hard to change that.
- By May 1946, every grave at the Netherlands American Cemetery in Margraten had been adopted by a Dutch family. Today, many are tended by the third or fourth generation of the original adopters.
- With the passage of time, many American descendants are not aware that a family member is buried at Margraten or that someone has cared for that grave for more than 80 years.
- Trump: Escalation in Cuba not likely
- Castro, 5 others indicted in the 1996 deaths of 4
- She’s 72, a grandmother of 8 and just reached a milestone
- Irma Garcia’s long path to her bachelor’s degree
- Irma Garcia walked the stage for her degree in public administration at George Mason University in Virginia on May 16.
- Raúl Castro: From Fidel’s shadow to DOJ’s crosshairs
- Raúl Castro, Cuba’s former president, watches a May Day rally in Havana on May 1, 2025.
- 80 years later, Dutch still tend soldiers’ graves
- [[The New York Times]]
- Sidestepping the Rules, Trump Serves Himself
- A Once-Unthinkable Move on His Taxes
- ‘Era of Indifference’: Scarce Aid as Calamity Unfolds in Somalia
- Relief System in Tatters as War on Iran Raises Food and Fuel Costs
- Muslima Ibrahim Mohamed, 38, holding her 2-day-old son, Noor Mohamed. She had lost four children to disease and hunger.
- Balking at Trump Fund, G.O.P. Hits the Brakes on the Budget
- Senator John Thune of South Dakota, the majority leader.
- Behind the Bar, a Symbol of Chicago’s Character
- SAM SIANIS, 1934-2026
- Slinging ‘Cheezborgers’ to the Famous and the Ordinary Alike
- Sam Sianis in 2009. He helped his uncle open the Billy Goat Tavern at its present location in 1964.
- D.N.C. Issues, But Undercuts, Its ’24 Autopsy
- A.I. Videos Give Reality Star Attention in L.A. Mayor’s Race
- Sidestepping the Rules, Trump Serves Himself
- [[Wall Street Journal]]
- Musk Set to Keep Firm Control Of SpaceX After It Goes Public
- Supervoting shares, Texas lawmake it hard to fire CEO and limit investor suits
- President Delays Order on AI, Fearing U.S. Would Fall Behind
- Israeli Forces Stalk Oct. 7 Attackers
- Militants who videotaped their exploits that day have been identified and killed
- Senate Rebels Against Trump Over Fund
- GOP ditches vote on immigration over concerns about $1.8 billion pot of money
- At Arlington, a Head Start on Memorial Day
- SOLEMN RESPECTS: First Sgt. Kosovare Fain carried her 4-year-old daughter, Reagan, as she and fellow soldiers of the Army 3d Infantry Regiment, or Old Guard, marked graves with flags Thursday at Arlington National Cemetery in Virginia.
- Mortgage Rates Edge Up
- Mortgage rates this week rose to their highest level since August, more bad news for shoppers during what is usually the busiest time of the year for home sales. The average rate on a 30-year* mortgage climbed to 6.51% this week, from 6.36% last week. Mortgage rates had dipped below 6% in February.
- U.S.-China Diplomacy Is Alive With ‘The Sound of Music’
- ‘Edelweiss’ and ‘Do Re Mi’ are standards in schools, karaoke bars and at state banquets
- Musk Set to Keep Firm Control Of SpaceX After It Goes Public
- [[Financial Times]] 영국에 위치한 니케이 소유 회사입니다.
- SpaceX, OpenAI and Anthropic IPOs set to ignite Wall Street trading frenzy
- ▸ Nasdaq loosens rules ▸ Passive investors could dump rival stocks ▸ ‘Trillionaire’ prospect for Musk
- Saudi Arabia curbs consultancy work and delays payments as Iran war bites
- Saudi Arabia has stopped issuing contracts for western consultancies working in the kingdom and delayed some payments as the government manages the fallout from the Iran war.
- Tehran projects calm over supreme leader’s health
- More than two months after Mojtaba Khamenei was chosen as the supreme leader of Iran, he has still been neither seen nor heard. Amid intrigue over his whereabouts and talk of serious injury, officials have released a trickle of updates, saying their leader has suffered only minor injuries and is in control. The head of protocol at his office said: 'You need to be patient. He will come and make speeches for you when the time comes.'
- SpaceX, OpenAI and Anthropic IPOs set to ignite Wall Street trading frenzy