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WWW.ESPN.COMNHL Power Rankings: New 1-32 poll, plus each team's top celebrity fanThe Canes move into the top 3, while the Penguins and Mammoth rise too. Which team was the biggest faller?0 Comments 0 Shares 1 Views 0 Reviews -
WWW.ESPN.COMWhat is Zuffa Boxing? Fighters, format, rules, more detailsDana White's Zuffa Boxing makes its debut Friday in Las Vegas. Andreas Hale answers some of the key questions you may have about the new promotion.0 Comments 0 Shares 1 Views 0 Reviews -
WWW.ESPN.COMNLL Week 9 preview: Critical weekend for eight teamsThe standings remain wide open behind the Rush. Here's what to watch in each of the four games.0 Comments 0 Shares 1 Views 0 Reviews -
WWW.NYTIMES.COMAirlines Cancel Hundreds of Flights In Anticipation of Powerful Winter StormAirlines are canceling hundreds of flights over the weekend in anticipation of frigid weather and ice and now across much of the country.0 Comments 0 Shares 1 Views 0 Reviews -
WWW.NYTIMES.COMTrump Wants to Build More U.S. Military Bases in Greenland. How Many Are There Now?The U.S. once maintained more than a dozen. Now it has one. President Trump wants more.0 Comments 0 Shares 1 Views 0 Reviews -
WWW.NYTIMES.COMWhat Happened At the Funeral For Fashion Designer ValentinoThe designer Valentino Garavani, who died on Monday at 93, was celebrated in Rome, a city that he embodied, according to its mayor.0 Comments 0 Shares 1 Views 0 Reviews -
WWW.NYTIMES.COMTrump Wants U.S. Investment in Venezuela, but Sanctions Still Complicate ItWith tight business restrictions still in place, companies may find it challenging to even assess what opportunities exist for them in the South American nation.0 Comments 0 Shares 1 Views 0 Reviews -
WWW.NYTIMES.COMPortland, Maine, Feels Like a Small Town And ICE Isnt WelcomeThe influx of federal agents this week has been hard for locals to ignore. Many are expressing their resistance to the immigration crackdown.0 Comments 0 Shares 1 Views 0 Reviews -
WWW.APARTMENTTHERAPY.COMThe Magic Spray Bottle I Use All Over My HomeIts so easy to use.READ MORE...0 Comments 0 Shares 2 Views 0 Reviews
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APNEWS.COMVance touts the Trump administrations record against abortion at a Washington rallyVice President JD Vance speaks at a rally ahead of the March for Life in Washington, Friday, Jan. 23, 2026. (AP Photo/Stephanie Scarbrough)2026-01-23T19:25:29Z Vice President JD Vance on Friday encouraged anti-abortion activists to take heart in how far weve come on the quest to limit the practice, listing the Trump administrations accomplishments including an expansion of a ban on U.S. foreign aid for groups supporting abortion services.There is still much road ahead to travel together, Vance told attendees at the annual March for Life demonstration, which draws tens of thousands of people annually to Washington. Attendees rallied on the National Mall before heading to the Supreme Court.Vance, a Republican, has spent years passionately advocating for Americans to have more children. He repeatedly expressed alarm about declining birth rates as he launched his political career in 2021 with a successful bid for the U.S. Senate in Ohio, and as vice president he has continued on that mission. I want more babies in the United States of America, Vance said in addressing last years March for Life.Earlier this week, Vance and his wife, second lady Usha Vance, announced in a social media post they are expecting a son, their fourth child, in late July. Let the record show, you have a vice president who practices what he preaches, Vance said on Friday.Vance cited the Supreme Courts 2022 Dobbs decision, which overturned Roe v. Wade, calling it the most important Supreme Court decision of my lifetime. He said President Donald Trumps leadership and appointment of conservative jurists put a definitive end to the tyranny of judicial rule on the question of human life. He also lauded the historic expansion of the Mexico City policy, the broadening of a ban on U.S. foreign aid for groups supporting abortion services, to include assistance going to international and domestic organizations and agencies that promote gender identity as well as diversity, equity and inclusion programs. We believe that every country in the world has the duty to protect life, Vance said, to a sea of supporters waving signs reading Choose Life, Make More Babies and I am the Pro-Life Generation.Its not our job as the United States of America to promote radical gender ideology, he said. Its our job to promote families and human flourishing.On Thursday, an official said the Trump administration was implementing new rules, halting foreign assistance from going not only to groups that provide abortion as a method of family planning but also to those that advocate gender ideology and DEI. The official spoke on the condition of anonymity ahead of the rules publication in the Federal Register on Friday.First established under President Ronald Reagan, a Republican, the policy was rescinded by subsequent Democratic administrations and was reinstated in Trumps first term.With its origins in the 1973 Roe v. Wade decision that nationally enshrined federal protection for abortion rights, the March for Life developed an entrenched presence among conservatives arguing against abortion. In 2017, Trump addressed the march by video, becoming the first sitting U.S. president to make live remarks. Three years later, he attended the event in person, further cementing its role in conservative politics. In a video address to this years crowd, Trump recounted his administrations unprecedented strides to protect innocent life and support the institution of the family like never before, enumerating his appointment of judges and justices who believed in interpreting the Constitution as written and reflecting on the Dobbs decision that overturned Roe v. Wade.Since the June 2022 Supreme Court ruling that overturned Roe, the march has become more celebratory, with organizers relishing a state-by-state fight in legislatures around the country and urging a continued fight until abortion is eliminated.___Meg Kinnard can be reached at http://x.com/MegKinnardAP.___Follow the APs coverage of abortion at https://apnews.com/hub/abortion. MEG KINNARD Kinnard covers national politics for The Associated Press. She lives in South Carolina. twitter instagram mailto0 Comments 0 Shares 2 Views 0 Reviews
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APNEWS.COMHaitis transitional council deepens political chaos by voting to oust the prime ministerHaiti's Prime Minister Alix Didier Fils-Aim attend the inauguration of the nation's new cabinet, in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, Nov. 16, 2024. (AP Photo/Odelyn Joseph, File)2026-01-23T19:02:00Z Haitis political crisis deepened Friday when a member of the countrys transitional council announced that a majority of the panel has voted to fire the countrys embattled Prime Minister Alix Didier Fils-Aim.Edgard Leblanc Fils made the announcement at a news conference alongside fellow council member Leslie Voltaire, defying U.S. government calls to maintain stability in the countrys leadership. Leblanc said the council would replace Fils-Aim within 30 days.It wasnt immediately clear if the councils current leader, Laurent Saint-Cyr, supported dismissing the prime minister. Saint-Cyr said in a statement earlier this week that he opposes any push to undermine the governments stability ahead of Feb. 7, when the council is provisionally scheduled to step down.0 Comments 0 Shares 2 Views 0 Reviews
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WWW.NYTIMES.COMDefending His Absence in House, Hunt Celebrates Casting a VoteHouse leaders were forced to rush Representative Wesley Hunt, Republican of Texas, to the Capitol with a police escort to avoid an embarrassing defeat on the floor.0 Comments 0 Shares 1 Views 0 Reviews -
WWW.NYTIMES.COMBovino Says Border Patrol Agents Are Experts in Dealing With ChildrenA picture of a 5-year-old detained by federal authorities near Minneapolis rocketed around the internet and has become an avatar of outrage.0 Comments 0 Shares 1 Views 0 Reviews -
WWW.NYTIMES.COMTrumps Push to Take Greenland Holds Promise and Peril for PutinIf the United States under President Trump starts acting as if its Russia, where does that leave President Vladimir V. Putin?0 Comments 0 Shares 1 Views 0 Reviews -
WWW.NYTIMES.COMHochul and Sherrills Fight Over Port Authority Leadership Delays Garcias ConfirmationIn her first week as governor of New Jersey, Mikie Sherrill is playing hardball to get her choice approved for a key role in Port Authority leadership.0 Comments 0 Shares 1 Views 0 Reviews -
WWW.APARTMENTTHERAPY.COMSee How a Stager Transformed This Cramped Brooklyn LoftWhen people say that they outgrew their home, they usually dont mean it literally. But that was exactly the case with a loft apartment in Brooklyn that a family of five (and a dog) decided to put on the market. The six-foot ceilings in the upper part of the loft were so short that the growing children actually hit their heads on them.READ MORE...0 Comments 0 Shares 2 Views 0 Reviews
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WWW.ESPN.COMNCAA approves jersey patches beginning Aug. 1The NCAA unearthed another revenue stream Friday when Division I leaders approved patches for uniforms in a move that could generate millions to fund athletic departments.0 Comments 0 Shares 1 Views 0 Reviews -
WWW.ESPN.COMBama plans to play embattled Bediako vs. VolsAlabama coach Nate Oats said Friday he's planning to play center Charles Bediako against Tennessee on Saturday.0 Comments 0 Shares 1 Views 0 Reviews -
WWW.NYTIMES.COMTrumps Turnabout on Greenland Shows the Limits of His Coercive PowersPresident Trumps faith in his ability to wring concessions by taking maximalist positions was on full display this week. So were the costs, as he splintered NATO and then undercut his credibility by climbing down from his threats.0 Comments 0 Shares 1 Views 0 Reviews -
WWW.NYTIMES.COMTikTok Updates Its Terms and Conditions in the U.S.The changes came after the apps Chinese parent company spun out an American entity to run TikTok in the United States.0 Comments 0 Shares 1 Views 0 Reviews -
Couple Receive $200,000 Settlement After Pungent Indian Food ComplaintThe University of Colorado, Boulder, denied liability in the civil rights lawsuit, which the couple filed after a comment about a dish that one of them was heating in an office microwave.0 Comments 0 Shares 1 Views 0 Reviews
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WWW.NYTIMES.COMA Timeline of TikToks Evolution, From Dances to BookTok to the Supreme CourtWhat started as the dance app became the center of political clashes, legal battles and a widely watched business deal. Heres how it got here.0 Comments 0 Shares 1 Views 0 Reviews -
WWW.ESPN.COMEx-Heat employee gets 3 years for jersey theftsA former Heat security officer has been sentenced to three years in federal prison and ordered to pay nearly $1.9 million in restitution for stealing hundreds of game-worn jerseys.0 Comments 0 Shares 1 Views 0 Reviews -
WWW.ESPN.COMSources: ChiSox, P Dominguez reach $20M dealThe White Sox and reliever Seranthony Dominguez are in agreement on a two-year, $20 million contract with a mutual option, sources told ESPN.0 Comments 0 Shares 1 Views 0 Reviews -
WWW.NYTIMES.COMTowering Snowdrifts Bury City on Remote Russian PeninsulaIts the biggest snowfall the Kamchatka Peninsula has experienced in nearly 60 years.0 Comments 0 Shares 1 Views 0 Reviews -
WWW.NYTIMES.COMAt March for Life, Some Abortion Opponents Want More From TrumpAt the March for Life, Vice President JD Vance acknowledged a fear that some of you have that not enough progress has been made.0 Comments 0 Shares 1 Views 0 Reviews -
WWW.NYTIMES.COMColorado Authorities Confirm Suicide by Hunter S. ThompsonAfter a monthslong review, investigators have concluded that all speculative theories could not be substantiated.0 Comments 0 Shares 1 Views 0 Reviews -
WWW.NYTIMES.COMThe Case for Compassion Over Tough Love for AddictionHarm reduction is losing funding, can it survive?0 Comments 0 Shares 1 Views 0 Reviews -
WWW.APARTMENTTHERAPY.COMThe 3-Ingredient Lunch I Make Between MeetingsIts my midday savior.READ MORE...0 Comments 0 Shares 2 Views 0 Reviews
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WWW.APARTMENTTHERAPY.COMA Gray Flip Kitchen Got Its 100-Year-Old Vintage Charm Back (for $600!)The goal was to incorporate vintage and cottage touches.READ MORE...0 Comments 0 Shares 2 Views 0 Reviews
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WWW.ESPN.COMDabo rips Ole Miss for 'blatant' tampering with LBClemson coach Dabo Swinney on Friday ripped Ole Miss coach Pete Golding's alleged direct tampering with a Clemson player and lamented the current landscape of college football that encourages such malfeasance.0 Comments 0 Shares 1 Views 0 Reviews -
WWW.ESPN.COMDay 7 live blog: All the latest news and actionIt's Day 7 at the Australian Open, and third-round action continues on what is scorching summer day in Melbourne. Our reporters are on the ground bringing you all the latest news, results, schedules, and more.0 Comments 0 Shares 1 Views 0 Reviews -
WWW.NYTIMES.COMFBI Agent Resigns After Trying to Investigate ICE Officer in Renee Good ShootingThe resignation of the agent, Tracee Mergen, was only the latest shock wave to have emerged from the Justice Departments handling of the shooting of Renee Good.0 Comments 0 Shares 1 Views 0 Reviews -
WWW.NYTIMES.COMIs This Who Trump Meant by the Worst of the Worst?The columnist Jamelle Bouie argues that the Trump administrations immigration policy has more in common with ethnic cleansing than actual immigration enforcement.0 Comments 0 Shares 1 Views 0 Reviews -
WWW.NYTIMES.COMWhy Polls About ICE and the Shooting of Renee Good Are So Hard to ParseNumerous surveys in recent weeks have addressed ICE and the aftermath of her shooting in Minneapolis. The results are more complicated than they might seem.0 Comments 0 Shares 1 Views 0 Reviews -
APNEWS.COMDemocrats vow to oppose homeland security funding bill. That increases the chance of a shutdownArchitect of the Capitol workers clear snow outside the U.S. Capitol, Sunday, Jan. 25, 2026, in Washington. (AP Photo/Julia Demaree Nikhinson)2026-01-25T17:32:36Z WASHINGTON (AP) Democratic senators are vowing to oppose a funding bill for the Department of Homeland Security following the shooting death of a 37-year-old Minnesota man, a stand that increases the prospect of a partial government shutdown by the end of the week. Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer, in a social media post Saturday night, hours after the shooting, said that what is happening in Minnesota is appalling and that Democrats will not provide the votes to proceed to the appropriations bill if the DHS funding bill is included.Six of the 12 annual spending bills for the current budget year have been signed into law by President Donald Trump. Six more are awaiting action in the Senate. If senators fail to act by midnight Friday, funding for agencies covered under those six bills will lapse.Republicans will need some Democratic support to pass the remaining spending bills in time to avoid a partial shutdown. That support was already in question after Renee Good, a mother of three, was fatally shot and killed earlier this month by an Immigration and Customs Enforcement agent in Minneapolis. But the fatal shooting Saturday of Alex Pretti, an intensive care unit nurse, quickly prompted Democrats to take a more forceful stand.Democrats sought common sense reforms in the Department of Homeland Security spending bill, but because of Republicans refusal to stand up to President Trump, the DHS bill is woefully inadequate to rein in the abuses of ICE, said Schumer, D-N.Y. I will vote no. A deal begins to unravelWashington Sen. Patty Murray, the top Democrat on the Senate Appropriations Committee and key negotiator on the funding package, had been pushing her colleagues to vote for the homeland security bill, arguing that Democrats had successfully fought off major increases to the ICE budget. But in the wake of the shooting, Murray said Sunday on X that I will NOT support the DHS bill as it stands.Federal agents cannot murder people in broad daylight and face zero consequences, Murray wrote.Federal officials have defended the actions of the agents involved in the Good and Pretti shootings as justified. Democrats said video released of both shootings showed otherwise, and some Republicans are calling for thorough investigations. The events in Minneapolis are incredibly disturbing, Sen. Bill Cassidy, R-La., posted on X. The credibility of ICE and DHS are at stake. There must be a full joint federal and state investigation. We can trust the American people with the truth. Sen. Thom Tillis, R-N.C., wants a thorough and impartial investigation into the shooting and said any administration official who rushes to judgment and tries to shut down an investigation before it begins are doing an incredible disservice to the nation and to President Trumps legacy. Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C. said Democrats should reconsider their threat to not support DHS funding and work with him to end the mess created by sanctuary city policies.Now is not the time to defund one of our major national security priorities: border protection, Graham said on X. Funding puzzle will be hard to solveThe growing backlash from Democrats puts Republican leaders in the Senate in a difficult position. Much of the government, including the Department of Defense, continues to operate on a short-term bill that provides funding only through Friday.Republican leaders had hoped to avoid another shutdown after last falls 43-day closure that revolved around Democrats insistence on extending federal subsidies that make health coverage more affordable for those enrolled in the Affordable Care Act marketplace. Before Prettis death, many Democrats felt the same way about a potential shutdown, lending support in the House to most of the remaining appropriations bills, with DHS the exception.The House sent the six funding bills to the Senate as a package, and that makes it exceedingly difficult to strip out the homeland security portion, as Murray and other Democrats are demanding. The path ahead is uncertain. The Senate is not scheduled to return to session until Tuesday, due to the snowstorm. The House plans to be out of session this week and would have to pass the funding package again if it is changed. Democrats are pushing for policy changes to be added to the homeland security spending bill that would force ICE agents to use warrants for immigration arrests, mandate strengthened training, require agents to identify themselves and have Border Patrol agents stay on the border rather than assisting ICE with immigration raids in the interior of the country.Connecticut Sen. Chris Murphy, the top Democrat on the subcommittee that oversees homeland security funding, told CNNs State of the Union on Sunday that Congress cannot fund a department that is murdering American citizens, that is traumatizing little boys and girls across the country in violation of the law. One by one, Democrats stake out oppositionDemocratic senators were scheduled to participate in conference call Sunday evening to discuss the next steps. House Democrats held their own caucus call in the morning with Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz and the states attorney general, Keith Ellison, both former congressmen.Several other Democratic senators announced they would vote no on homeland security money, including some who had helped Republicans end the record shutdown last year.The abuses of power we are seeing from ICE in Minneapolis and across the country are un-American and cannot be normalized, Sen. Jacky Rosen, D-Nev., said in a post on X. Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto, D-Nev., also said she opposes that portion of the package.Minnesotas Democratic senators also indicated they will oppose the DHS funding bill. For those asking where we go from here: Not voting to fund ICE is a great place for us to start, Sen. Tina Smith wrote on X.We oppose the ICE funding bill. We call for a full and transparent investigation with state officials, Sen. Amy Klobuchar said. And we call on our Republican colleagues to stand up. They know this is wrong.Why the entire government wouldnt shut downThe progress that Congress has made so far on spending bills means that much of the federal governments work would continue even if lawmakers are unable to complete the job.A bill that Trump signed Friday funds the departments of Justice, Commerce and the Interior, the Environmental Protection Agency, NASA, and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers through the end of the budget year in September.The Department of Agriculture was funded from a previous measure, which means a shutdown shouldnt stop food assistance this time.But other critical operations of the government would be disrupted. ___Associated Press writers Michelle L. Price and Lisa Mascaro contributed to this report.0 Comments 0 Shares 1 Views 0 Reviews
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APNEWS.COMUS security agreement for Ukraine is 100% ready to be signed, Zelenskyy saysUkrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy speaks during a joint press conference with Lithuania's President Gitanas Nauseda and Polish President Karol Nawrocki, at the Presidential palace in Vilnius, Lithuania, Sunday, Jan. 25, 2026. (AP Photo/Mindaugas Kulbis)2026-01-25T17:16:41Z President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said Sunday that a U.S. security guarantees document for Ukraine is 100% ready after two days of talks involving representatives from Ukraine, the U.S. and Russia.Speaking to journalists in Vilnius during a visit to Lithuania, Zelenskyy said Ukraine is waiting for its partners to set a signing date, after which the document would go to the U.S. Congress and Ukrainian parliament for ratification.Zelenskyy also emphasized Ukraines push for European Union membership by 2027, calling it an economic security guarantee.The Ukrainian leader described the talks in Abu Dhabi, the capital of the United Arab Emirates, as likely the first trilateral format in quite a long while that included not only diplomats but military representatives from all three sides. The talks, which began on Friday and continued Saturday, were the latest aiming to end Russias nearly four-year full-scale invasion. Zelenskyy acknowledged fundamental differences between Ukrainian and Russian positions, reaffirming territorial issues as a major sticking point.Our position regarding our territory Ukraines territorial integrity must be respected, he said. Russian President Vladimir Putin discussed a Ukraine settlement with U.S. President Donald Trumps envoys Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner during marathon talks late Thursday. The Kremlin insisted that to reach a peace deal, Kyiv must withdraw its troops from the areas in the east that Russia illegally annexed but has not fully captured. Zelenskyy said the U.S. is trying to find a compromise, but that all sides must be ready for compromise.Negotiators will return to the UAE on Feb. 1 for the next round of talks, according to a U.S. official. The recent talks covered a broad range of military and economic matters and included the possibility of a ceasefire before a deal, the official said. There was not yet an agreement on a final framework for oversight and operation of Ukraines Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant, which is occupied by Russia and is the largest in Europe. RSShttps://feedx.net https://feedx.site0 Comments 0 Shares 1 Views 0 Reviews
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APNEWS.COMDr. William Foege, leader in smallpox eradication, diesPresident Barack Obama awards the Medal of Freedom to Dr. William Foege, former director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, who helped lead the effort to eradicate smallpox, during a ceremony in the East Room of the White House in Washington, Tuesday, May 29, 2012. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak, File)2026-01-25T15:58:04Z ATLANTA (AP) Dr. William Foege, a leader of one of humanitys greatest public health victories the global eradication of smallpox has died.Foege died Saturday in Atlanta at the age of 89, according to the Task Force for Global Health, which he co-founded.The 6-foot-7 inch Foege literally stood out in the field of public health. A whip-smart medical doctor with a calm demeanor, he had a canny knack for beating back infectious diseases.He was director of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in the late 1970s and early 1980s, and later held other key leadership roles in campaigns against international health problems.But his greatest achievement came before all that, with his work on smallpox, one of the most lethal diseases in human history. For centuries, it killed about one-third of the people it infected and left most survivors with deep scars on their faces from the pus-filled lesions. Smallpox vaccination campaigns were well established by the time Foege was a young doctor. Indeed, it was no longer seen in the United States. But infections were still occurring elsewhere, and efforts to stamp them out were stalling.Working as a medical missionary in Nigeria in the 1960s, Foege and his colleagues developed a ring containment strategy, in which a smallpox outbreak was contained by identifying each smallpox case and vaccinating everyone who the patients might come into contact with. Stay up to date with the news and the best of AP by following our WhatsApp channel. Follow on The method relied heavily on quick detective work and was born out of necessity. There simply wasnt enough vaccine available to immunize everyone, Foege wrote in House on Fire, his 2011 book about the smallpox eradication effort. It worked, and became pivotal in helping rid the world of smallpox for good. The last naturally occurring case was seen in Somalia in 1977. In 1980, the World Health Organization declared smallpox eradicated from the Earth. If you look at the simple metric of who has saved the most lives, he is right up there with the pantheon. Smallpox eradication has prevented hundreds of millions of deaths, said former CDC director Dr. Tom Frieden, who consulted with Foege regularly.Foege was born March 12, 1936. His father was a Lutheran minister, but he became interested in medicine at 13 while working at a drugstore in Colville, Washington.He got his medical degree from the University of Washington in 1961 and a masters in public health from Harvard in 1965.He was director of the Atlanta-based CDC from 1977 to 1983, then held other international public health leadership roles, including stints as executive director at The Carter Center and senior fellow at the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.In 2012, President Barack Obama presented Foege with the Medal of Freedom, the nations highest civilian honor. In 2016, while awarding Foege an honorary degree, Duke University President President Richard Brodhead called him the Father of Global Health.Bill Foege had an unflagging commitment to improving the health of people across the world, through powerful, purpose-driven coalitions applying the best science available, Task Force for Global Health CEO Dr. Patrick OCarroll said in a statement. We try to honor that commitment in every one of our programs, every day.___Jack Dura contributed to this report from Bismarck, North Dakota. MIKE STOBBE Stobbe mainly covers public health for The Associated Press. twitter mailto RSShttps://feedx.net https://feedx.site0 Comments 0 Shares 2 Views 0 Reviews
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APNEWS.COMRow erupts within UKs governing Labour Party after popular mayor blocked from upcoming electionAndy Burnham the Mayor of Manchester arrives a fringe meeting during the annual Labour Party conference in Liverpool, England, Sept. 29, 2025. (AP Photo/Jon Super, File)2026-01-25T14:22:51Z LONDON (AP) A row erupted Sunday within Britains governing Labour Party after the ambitious mayor of Manchester was prevented from trying to reenter Parliament at a special election in the city, with critics claiming that Prime Minister Keir Starmer did not want to see a potential rival back in the House of Commons.Andy Burnham, who has been in charge of the Greater Manchester region since 2017, made a request to Labours governing committee on Saturday to stand as the partys candidate in the election for the Gorton and Denton constituency, which is expected to take place by the end of February.If he ended up winning in a traditionally safe Labour seat, then he would have to stand down from his job as mayor, meaning that there would likely have to be another special election there. Burnhams mandate ends in May 2028.The decision to block Burnham was made by a 10-strong group of Labours National Executive Committee, the body behind the partys election machinery. Labour said the NEC had decided to deny Burnham permission to stand in order to avoid an unnecessary election for Manchester mayor, which would have a substantial and disproportionate impact on party campaign resources. Burnham has not responded yet to the decision.Labour is widely predicted to suffer a drubbing at a raft of elections in May Britains equivalent of the U.S. midterms. If current opinion polls are any guide, then Labour is expected to lose power in Wales for the first time since the legislature was created in 1999, fall way short of reclaiming power in Scotland and get battered in local elections in England. Since winning July 2024s general election by a landslide, Labour has seen its poll ratings tank, partly because of a series of policy missteps, which have been directly linked to Starmers decision-making. Other parties, including the anti-immigration Reform U.K. and the Greens, have been the main beneficiaries of Labours apparent drop in support. The prime ministers poll ratings are particularly dire at present and many inside the party think he may face a leadership challenge if Mays elections end up being as bad as predicted. Burnham, who served in Labour governments in the 2000s under prime ministers Tony Blair and Gordon Brown, has made no secret of his ambition to lead the party at some stage in the future. Burnham, widely known as the King of the North in reference to the television fantasy show Game of Thrones, has twice before fought for the Labour leadership and lost.Though Burnham insisted he would be a team player in his request on Saturday, many Starmer allies appear unconvinced given he has expressed several views that put him at odds with the prime minister, notably on economic policy. Last September, he said he wanted to launch a debate about the direction of policy and how to defeat Reform.Labour lawmaker John Slinger said the quick and clear decision meant the party could move on from the damaging introspection and psychodrama of the last week and pull together behind the eventual candidate.Others were aghast at the decision.Former Cabinet minister Louise Haigh said it was incredibly disappointing and called for the NEC to change course and make the right decision.0 Comments 0 Shares 2 Views 0 Reviews
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APNEWS.COMGetting to no: Europes leaders find a way to speak with one voice against TrumpPresident Donald Trump speaks before departing on Marine One from the South Lawn of the White House, Jan. 20, 2026, in Washington. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon, File)2026-01-25T12:34:39Z LONDON (AP) No more fawning praise. No more polite workarounds and old-style diplomacy. And no one is calling Donald Trump daddy now. European leaders who scrambled for a year to figure out how to deal with an emboldened American president in his second term edged closer to saying no, or something diplomatically like it, to his disregard for international law and his demands for their territory. Trumps vow to take over Greenland and punish any country that resists, seems to have been the crucible. Red lines were deemed to have been crossed this year when Trump abruptly revived his demand that the United States absolutely must rule Greenland, the semiautonomous region that is part of NATO ally Denmark. That pushed even the most mild-mannered diplomats to issue sharp warnings against Trump, whom they had flattered withroyal treatment and fawning praise. Britain will not yield its support for Greenlands sovereignty, British Prime Minister Keir Starmer said. Several of the continents leaders said Europe will not be blackmailed over Greenland.Threats have no place among allies, said Norwegian Prime Minister Jonas Gahr Stre. The tough diplomatic talk around the showdown last week in Davos, Switzerland, was not the only factor pressuring Trump. U.S. congressional elections are approaching in November amid a sinking stock market and wilting approval ratings. European leaders also are not the first to stand in Trumps way during his second term see Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell. But the dramatic turnabout among Europes elite, from appeasing Trump to defying him, offers clues in the ongoing effort among some nations of how to say no to a president who hates hearing it and is known to retaliate.We want a piece of ice for world protection, and they wont give it, Trump told his audience at the World Economic Forum. You can say yes, and we will be very appreciative. Or you can say no, and we will remember. Lesson 1: Speak as oneIn recent days, Europe offered abundant refusals to go along with Trump, from his Greenland demand and joining his new Board of Peace and even to what Canadas Mark Carney called the fiction that the alliance functions for the benefit of any country more than the most powerful. The moment marked a unity among European leaders that they had struggled to achieve for a year. When Europe is not divided, when we stand together and when we are clear and strong also in our willingness to stand up for ourselves, then the results will show, Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen said. I think we have learned something.Federiksen herself exemplified the learning curve. A year ago, she and other leaders were on their heels and mostly responding to the Trump administration. She found it necessary to tell reporters in February 2025, We are not a bad ally, after Vice President JD Vance had said Denmark was not being a good ally.Trump is transactional. He has little use for diplomacy and no need (for) international law, he told The New York Times this month. Therein lay the disconnect between typically collaborative European leaders and the Republican president when he blazed back into the White House saying he wanted the U.S. to take over Greenland, Panama and perhaps even Canada. In Trumps first term, Europe didnt know what to expect and tried to deal with him by using the old rules of diplomacy, with the expectation that, if they kept talking to him in measured terms, that he would change his behavior and move into the club, said Mark Shanahan, associate professor of political engagement at the University of Surrey,.Its very hard for other leaders who deal with each other through the niceties of a rules-based system and diplomatic conversation, Shanahan said. It is hard for them to change.Five months after Trumps inauguration last year, with his Greenland threat in the air, European leaders had gotten their heads around Trump management enough to pull off a meeting of NATO nations in the Netherlands. NATO members agreed to contribute more and widely gave Trump credit for forcing them to modernize. Secretary-General Mark Rutte, known as the coalitions Trump whisperer, likened the presidents role quieting the Iran-Israel war to a daddy intervening in a schoolyard brawl. Lesson 2: Consider saying no and make choices accordingly Traditional diplomacy exists to preserve possibilities of working together. That often means avoiding saying a flat no if possible. But Trumps Greenland gambit was so stark a threat from one NATO member to another that Greenlands prime minister actually said the word. Enough, Jens-Frederik Nielsen said in a statement shortly after Trumps remarks Jan. 5. No more pressure. No more hints. No more fantasies about annexation.That played a part in setting the tone. Denmarks leader said any such invasion of Greenland would mark the end of NATO and urged alliance members to take the threat seriously. They did, issuing statement after statement rejecting the renewed threat. Trump responded last weekend from his golf course in Florida with a threat to charge a 10% import tax within a month on goods from eight European nations Denmark, Norway, Sweden, France, Germany, the United Kingdom, the Netherlands and Finland. The rate, he wrote, would climb to 25% on June 1 if no deal was in place for the Complete and Total purchase of Greenland by the United States.Lesson 3: Reject Trumps big-power paradigmTrumps fighting words lit a fire among leaders arriving in Davos. But they seemed to recognize, too, that the wider Trump world left him vulnerable. Trump was in a fairly weak position because he has a lot of other looming problems going on, domestically, including an upcoming U.S. Supreme Court decision on his tariffs and a backlash to immigration raids in Minnesota, said Duncan Snidal, professor emeritus of international relations at Oxford University and the University of Chicago. Canadas Carney said no by reframing the question not as being about Greenland, but about whether it was time for European countries to build power together against a bully and his answer was yes. Without naming the U.S. or Trump, Carney spoke bluntly: Europe, he said, should reject the big powers coercion and exploitation. It was time to accept, he said, that a rupture in the alliance, not a transition, had occurred.Unsaid, Snidel pointed out, was that the rupture was very new, and though it might be difficult to repair in the future, doing so under adjusted rules remains in U.S. and European interests beyond Trumps presidency. Its too good a deal for all of them not to, Snidel said. Lesson 4: Exercise cautionBefore Trump stepped away from the podium in Davos, he had begun to back down.He canceled his threat to use force to take over Greenland. Not long after, he reversed himself fully, announcing the framework for a deal that would make his tariff threat unnecessary. Trump told Fox Business that were going to have total access to Greenland, under the framework, without divulging what that might mean.Frederiksen hit the warning button again. In a statement, she said, We cannot negotiate on our sovereignty.In other words: No. LAURIE KELLMAN Kellman has covered U.S. politics and foreign affairs for the Associated Press, including 23 years reporting from Washington and three from Jerusalem. She is based in London. twitter facebook mailto0 Comments 0 Shares 2 Views 0 Reviews
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WWW.404MEDIA.COScientists Discovered a Cow That Uses Tools Like a ChimpanzeeWelcome back to the Abstract! Here are the studies this week that scratched the sweet spot, extended a hand, went over the hill, and ended up on Mercury.First, a clever cow single-hoofedly upends assumptions about bovine intelligence. Next, weve got the oldest rock art ever discovered, the graying of modern zoos, and the delightfully named phenomena of bursty bulk flows.As always, for more of my work, check out my book First Contact: The Story of Our Obsession with Aliens or subscribe to my personal newsletter the BeX Files.Cows use tools? You herd it here firstOsuna-Mascar, Antonio J. et al. Flexible use of a multi-purpose tool by a cow. Current Biology.Veronika, a Swiss brown cow that lives in a rural mountain village in Austria, is the first cow to demonstrate tool use. How udderly amoosing!Veronkias owner Witgar Wiegele, who keeps her as a pet companion, noticed years ago that she likes to pick up sticks with her mouth in order to reach hard-to-scratch places on her body.The hills were soon alive with word of Veronikas tool-using prowess, attracting the attention of researchers Antonio Osuna-Mascar and Alice Auersperg of the University of Veterinary Medicine Vienna.Tool use is a sign of advanced cognition that has been observed in many animals, including primates, orcas, and birds. But cows, with their vacant expressions and docile nature, have been overlooked as likely tool users, except as a joke in Gary Larsons Far Side cartoons.In their new study, Osuna-Mascar and Auersperg presented Veronika with a deck brush, which she proceeded to use as a scratching tool in a variety of configurations.We hypothesized that she would target difficult-to-reach body regions and use the more effective brushed end over the stick end, the researchers said. Veronikas behavior went beyond these predictions, however, showing versatility, anticipation, and fine motor targeting.Unexpectedly and revealingly, Veronikas tool-end use depended strongly on body region: she predominantly used the brush end for upper-body scratching and the stick end for lower areas, such as the udder and belly skin flaps, they added. Importantly, the differential use of both broom ends constitutes the use of a multipurpose tool, exploiting distinct properties of a single object for different functions. Comparable behavior has only been consistently documented in chimpanzees.I recommend reading the study in full, as it is not very long and contains ample video footage demonstrating Veronikas mastery of the deck brush. The authors seem genuinely enraptured by her talents and, frankly, its hard to blame them for milking the discovery. Overall, the findings serves as a reminder not to cowtow to stereotypes of braindead bovines, a point made by the studys bullish conclusion:Despite millennia of domestication for productivity, livestock have been almost entirely excluded from discussions of animal intelligence, Osuna-Mascar and Auersperg said. Veronikas case challenges this neglect, revealing that technical problem-solving is not confined to large-brained species with manipulative hands or beaks.She did not fashion tools like the cow in Gary Larsons cartoon, but she selected, adjusted, and used one with notable dexterity and flexibility, they concluded. Perhaps the real absurdity lies not in imagining a tool-using cow, but in assuming such a thing could never exist.Now thats something to ruminate on.In other newsHands of ancientsOktaviana, A.A., Joannes-Boyau, R., Hakim, B. et al. Rock art from at least 67,800 years ago in Sulawesi. Nature.Archaeologists have discovered the oldest known rock art, which are very faint hand stencils made by humans 68,000 years ago on a cave wall on the Indonesian island of Sulawesi.For comparison, the next oldest rock art, located in Spain and attributed to Neanderthals, is roughly 66,000 years old. The newly-dated hand stencils were made by a mysterious group of people who eventually migrated across the lost landmass of Sahul, which is now submerged, and reached Australia.https://youtu.be/PRNL329dZ9Y?si=GB669R7KajqivlzZThe find supports a growing view that Sulawesi was host to a vibrant and longstanding artistic culture, said researchers co-led by Adhi Agus Oktaviana and Budianto Hakim of Indonesia's National Agency for Research and Innovation, and Renaud Joannes-Boyau of Southern Cross University.The presence of this extremely old art in Sulawesi suggests that the initial peopling of Sahul about 65,000 years involved maritime journeys between Borneo and Papua, a region that remains poorly explored from an archaeological perspective, the team added.Though the stencils are extremely faint and obscured by younger paintings, its still eerie to see the contours of human hands from a long-lost era when dire wolves and Siberian unicorns still roamed our world.Zoo animals get long in the toothMeireles, Joo Pedro et al. Aging populations threaten conservation goals of zoos. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.Speaking of really old stuff, there has been much consternation of late about falling birth rates and aging populations in many nations around the world. As it turns out, similar demographic anxieties are playing out in zoos across Europe and North America, where mammal populations have, on average, become older and less reproductively active according to a new study.On the one hand, this is good news because it signals improvements in the health and longevity of mammals in zoos, reflecting a long-term effort to transform zoos into conservation hubs as opposed to sites of spectacle. But it also fundamentally jeopardizes the long-term capacity of zoos to harbor insurance populations, facilitate reintroductions of threatened species, and simply maintain a variety of self-sustaining species programs, said researchers led by Joo Pedro Meireles of the University of Zurich.This story struck me because of my many childhood visits to see an Asian elephant named Lucy, who was the star of the Edmonton Valley Zoo when I was young (I am now old). I recently learned Lucy is still chilling there at the ripe old age of 50! This is positively Methuselan for a zoo elephant, though it is not an unusual age for them in the wild. Lucy is the perfect poster child (or rather, poster senior) for this broader aging effect. Long may she reign.Bust out the bursty bulk flowWilliamson, Hayley N. et al. BepiColombo at Mercury: Three Flybys, Three Magnetospheres. Geophysical Research Letters.Well close with a reminder that the planet Mercury exists.It can be easy to overlook this tiny rock, which is barely bigger than the Moon. But Mercury is dynamic and full of surprises, according to a study based on close flybys of the planet by BepiColombo, a collaborative space mission between Europe and Japan, which is tasked with cracking this mercurial nut.BepiColombo zoomed just over 100 miles above Mercurys surface in October 2021, June 2022, and June 2023, but each encounter revealed distinct portraits of the planets magnetosphere, which is a magnetic bubble that surrounds some planets, including Earth.These flybys all passed from dusk to dawn through the nightside equatorial region but were noticeably different from each other, said researchers led by Hayley N. Williamson of the Swedish Institute of Space Physics. Specifically, we see energetic ions in the second and third flybys that are not there in the first.We conclude that these ions are part of a phenomenon called bursty bulk flow, which also happens at Earth, the team concluded. Bursty bulk flow, in addition to being a fun phrase to say outloud, are intense, transient jets in a magnetosphere that drive energetic particles toward the planet, and are driven by solar activity.BepiColombo is on track to scooch into orbit around Mercury this November, where it will continue to study the planet up close for years, illuminating this world of extremes. In my hierarchy of Mercurys, the planet sits above the Ford brand, the 80th element, and the Roman god, with only Freddie surpassing it. So, its good to see it getting the attention it deserves.Thanks for reading! See you next week.0 Comments 0 Shares 1 Views 0 Reviews -
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WWW.PROPUBLICA.ORGDocumenting an Alaska Village, Before and After the Storm That Destroyed ItJoann Carls dog Rocky, a long-eared, short-legged mix the color of graham crackers, has become Alaska famous since I first met Carl in April. Over the past few months, shes seen his photo all over Facebook, she said, rescued after Typhoon Halong wiped away more than half the homes in her coastal Alaska Native village of Kipnuk, population 700.At the Anchorage Daily News, were based in Alaskas largest city but travel as often as we can to small communities like Kipnuk in an attempt to cover a state thats twice the size of Texas. We try to report more than one story at a time to justify the expense of plane tickets. Flights to a remote village in a small plane cost the same as a trip to New York. But rarely do we have the chance to document a community just before the breaking news arrives.Maybe you didnt hear much about the typhoon. It began as a tropical storm, dumping record rainfall in parts of Japan before swirling toward Alaska. By the time it reached our shores, the remnants of the storm still carried enough force to flood two villages, sweeping away homes and leaving as many as three people dead.Im writing to you about the storm because photojournalist Marc Lester and I happened to visit Kipnuk shortly before the typhoon. Marc returned to cover the evacuation, providing a look at an Alaska village on the front lines of climate change just before and after the devastation.The story of destruction in Carls hometown, along with the nearby village of Kwigillingok, adds an exclamation point to long-simmering fears about the future of Alaska coastal villages. Which town will be wiped away next? Where will climate refugees live? Should their former homes be rebuilt? If not, what does it mean for the future of these communities?Emily Schwing, reporting for KYUK public radio in Bethel and ProPublicas Local Reporting Network, wrote in May about climate refugees the government helped relocate from the Yupik village of Newtok. In November, while covering Alaskas crumbling public school infrastructure, she wrote how the school in Kipnuk housed hundreds of residents as an emergency shelter during the storm surge from Halong.When Marc and I first visited that schoolhouse in April, we were reporting on a very different kind of story. Justine Paul, Carls son, spent seven years in jail charged with murder in Alaskas glacially slow justice system, where serious cases can take a decade to resolve. Pauls case was ultimately dismissed after the evidence against him turned out to be deeply flawed. After struggling with addiction on the streets of Anchorage upon his release, Paul returned to live with Carl in the little Kipnuk house where he grew up.Our visit to their village before the storm gave Marc a chance to document a version of Kipnuk that no longer exists and maybe never will again.Justine Paul leaves Joann Carls house after his lunch break from work in April. Marc Lester/ADNCarl, Pauls mother, cries at her home in Kipnuk in April while describing her sons situation. Marc Lester/ADNThe people we met in the spring were subsequently airlifted to emergency shelter in an evacuation unlike any the state had experienced. They arrived in Bethel via helicopters and small planes. Some stayed in the regional hub. Others were packed shoulder-to-shoulder on the floor of a massive Alaska Air National Guard cargo plane bound for Anchorage. Many would end up staying for weeks in Anchorage at a convention center and a sports arena that had been transformed into emergency shelters.Five days after the storm, Marc toured Kipnuk on the back of an all-terrain vehicle with one of the villages few holdouts.The floodwaters had devastated a community thats been settling into melting permafrost like others on the coast. The central part of the village resembled a collapsed Jenga tower, rectangular homes scattered and strewn, Marc reported. Most were lifted from their pilings by the raging floodwater and deposited elsewhere. Some were surprisingly intact, but muddied, sodden, compromised and unlivable where they came to rest. Gone was the thrum and throttle of normal life we had seen earlier in the year, Marc found, replaced by an eerie vacancy.Zacharias John looks at the devastation left by Halong in Kipnuk on Oct. 17. John decided to stay back and help the few people who remain in the village. Marc Lester/ADNIt had taken Carls family five hours to travel the three blocks from their house to the makeshift shelter at the school when the storm first hit. Carls son Raymond helped elders get over debris on the ground. Pieces of houses washed against the towns boardwalk. She said the whole village smelled of diesel fuel spilled stove oil.Villagers had to ration food that had been stored at the schoolhouse for students. One cracker and a spoonful of hashbrowns per person, Carl said. Eventually, volunteers salvaged dried Native foods from homes that were still standing: fish, berries, moose meat.We fed the kids more and the mens that were doing all the work, the rescues, Carl said.A volunteer pilot flew Rocky from Kipnuk to safety, she said. Used her own gas.One house floated 15 miles away, Carl said. Bodies from some of Kipnuks aboveground graves had been seen near the towns airport.The storm, whose impacts the Alaska Climate Research Center later linked to global warming, killed 67-year-old Ella Mae Kashatok in Kwigillingok. The home she was in broke loose and floated toward the Bering Sea, state troopers said. Two members of her family, Vernon Pavil, 71, and Chester Kashatok, 41, have not been found.A home came to rest on a riverbank opposite Kipnuk during Halong. Marc Lester/ADNPaul flew to Bethel and then to Togiak, a coastal village 140 miles from Kipnuk that was less impacted by the storms. Carl, who has diabetes, said she evacuated Kipnuk on a Blackhawk helicopter. She sat next to a 2-year-old girl whose name she didnt know and who was traveling without her parents. Carl made a show of looking out the window and appearing interested in the scenery, she said, to keep the toddler occupied and calm.Carl said Kipnuks subsistence culture made the villagers especially well-equipped to survive the aftermath of the storm. Hunters regularly face life-and-death decisions, she said. Starvation times werent so long ago. Elders taught everyone to dry and save food.Carl, however, is not likely to be around to experience that way of life in the village anymore.Kipnuk in April 2025. Carl doesnt know if the village will survive after Halongs devastation. Marc Lester/ADNAlthough her home is one of the few that survived it was built in the late 1970s or early 80s on pilings moored deep in the tundra shes not optimistic about returning to the village full time.She burst into tears when asked if Kipnuk will exist in the future.Its probably the end, she said over a recent lunch of Whoppers at an Anchorage Burger King. Its a ghost town.Kids play basketball in Kipnuk in April. Marc Lester/ADNThe post Documenting an Alaska Village, Before and After the Storm That Destroyed It appeared first on ProPublica.0 Comments 0 Shares 4 Views 0 Reviews -
WWW.NYTIMES.COMAmid Two-Week Internet Blackout, Some Iranians Are Getting Back OnlineMany in Iran are gaining brief and unexplained windows of online connectivity, offering a widening glimpse of the extent of the government crackdown.0 Comments 0 Shares 1 Views 0 Reviews -
S.N.L. Recap: Teyana Taylor Hosts, the First Trump Awards and MoreA covetous president grabbed up all the trophies on this weeks Saturday Night Live broadcast, hosted by Teyana Taylor, star of One Battle After Another.0 Comments 0 Shares 1 Views 0 Reviews