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Israel says Hezbollah agent targeted in Beirut suburb strike
Israel conducted an airstrike on a Beirut suburb that targeted a Hezbollah operative, days after the military’s first assault on the Lebanese capital since a ceasefire started in November.
The Israel Defense Forces said Tuesday the strike was aimed at Hassan Ali Mahmoud Bdeir, a member of Hezbollah, who it said had worked with “Hamas ...Read more

Ukraine pushes ahead on US deal after Trump renews criticism
Ukraine’s top diplomat said officials are pressing ahead with the U.S. toward an “acceptable” economic accord hours after President Donald Trump accused Kyiv of trying to renegotiate the deal.
Foreign Minister Andrii Sybiha said Ukrainian officials were poring over the latest draft of an infrastructure and natural resources deal sent by ...Read more

A Trump bid for a third term could set off legal battles in states nationwide
WASHINGTON — In a private meeting at a global summit in Buenos Aires in 2018, China's president, Xi Jinping, turned to President Donald Trump and said it was a shame he couldn't stay in power beyond the two-term limit set by the U.S. Constitution. Trump agreed.
It was just one of several instances in which Trump mused over the prospects of an...Read more
Le Pen election ban risks fragile calm in French politics
Marine Le Pen’s election ban risks a surge in anti-establishment sentiment in France that could undermine efforts to stabilize the nation’s creaky public finances.
The court decision to bar the far-right leader from the 2027 presidential race jeopardizes the delicate peace that has allowed President Emmanuel Macron’s government to pass a ...Read more
World's largest wildlife crossing reaches critical milestone. Now what?
LOS ANGELES — Monday was momentous for the Wallis Annenberg Wildlife Crossing although it still looked like a bridge to nowhere from the 101 Freeway, where more than 300,000 vehicles stream endlessly every day.
Nearly three years after the project began, the critical milestone was visible only to the government officials, scientists and ...Read more
Trump's tariffs reshaped manufacturing in Asia. This time, the ramifications are even broader
TAIPEI, Taiwan — The first time that President Donald Trump imposed tariffs on Chinese goods in 2018, it set off a scramble among manufacturers who had long relied on China to start looking for other options. The aim was to spur U.S. manufacturing, reduce a trade imbalance and punish China for trade practices Trump said were unfair.
Now, in ...Read more
South Korea to rule on President Yoon's impeachment on Friday
South Korea is poised to rule on the political fate of impeached President Yoon Suk Yeol, deciding whether to permanently remove him from office for his short-lived martial law decree or reinstate him.
The Constitutional Court will rule on the validity of Yoon’s impeachment on Friday at 11 a.m., the court said. The ruling will bring to a ...Read more

Land reparations are possible − and over 225 US communities are already working to make amends for slavery and colonization
Ever since the United States government’s unfulfilled promise of giving every newly freed Black American “40 acres and a mule” after the Civil War, descendants of the enslaved have repeatedly proposed the idea of redistributing land to redress the nation’s legacies of slavery.
Land-based reparations are also a form of redress ...Read more

America the secular? What a changing religious landscape means for US politics
After climbing for decades, the percentage of Americans with no religion has leveled off. For the past few years, the share of adults who identify as atheist, agnostic or “nothing in particular” has stood at about 29%, according to a major study the Pew Research Center released Feb. 26, 2025.
But this hardly means that the “...Read more

Will Trump kill programs that help drug users? LA harm reduction groups await fate
LOS ANGELES — Samson Tafolo's final count read 119.
For 45 minutes, he had tugged a wagon packed with mini water bottles, hemp cigarettes and miscellaneous hygiene products around Skid Row, handing out the supplies and keeping a tally of everyone he served on his usual route.
Tafolo and other leaders at the Sidewalk Project, a harm reduction...Read more

More than a third of all Pennsylvania districts had teacher vacancies amid continuing educator shortage
PHILADELPHIA — Pennsylvania teacher vacancies dipped slightly over the last year, but more than a third of all districts in the state still reported at least one vacancy this school year — meaning thousands of kids lacked a permanent teacher, or were placed in larger classes for all or part of the term.
The numbers were starker in schools ...Read more

Duffy to lay out transportation funding plan amid cutback push
WASHINGTON — Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy is set to return to Capitol Hill on Wednesday to pitch the Trump administration’s take on the next big transportation and infrastructure bill as GOP lawmakers mull topline infrastructure funding levels.
Duffy, who will appear at the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee, is operating ...Read more

Their physical therapy coverage ran out before they could walk again
Mari Villar was slammed by a car that jumped the curb, breaking her legs and collapsing a lung. Amy Paulo was in pain from a femur surgery that wasn’t healing properly. Katie Kriegshauser suffered organ failure during pregnancy, weakening her so much that she couldn’t lift her baby daughter.
All went to physical therapy, but their health ...Read more

Two Minnesota towns rally to protect Ukraine war refugee whose future is in doubt
ST. PETER, Minn. — Daria “Dasha” Shyroka is a 19-year-old college student with a naturally bubbly disposition. She’s rarely seen without a smile, even in her precarious predicament: War in the homeland she hasn’t visited since 2021 but could soon see her forced return.
On a recent afternoon the smile was gone and Shyroka sat in a ...Read more

Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker's push to allow community colleges to offer 4-year degrees faces uphill climb in Springfield
CHICAGO — Monica Mendoza started working on her early childhood education about a decade ago with the dream of opening a day care in her home.
After breaks due to the pandemic and the birth of her third and fourth child, Mendoza, now 38, said she is on track to earn her associate’s degree from Oakton College in May.
She also wants to earn ...Read more

Medicaid cuts could hurt older adults who rely on home care, nursing homes
Dr. Fred Levin has been watching with growing alarm the national debate around federal cuts to Medicaid. He’s responsible for the medical care of about 100 older adults at the Community PACE center in rural Newaygo, Michigan. For his patients, Medicaid isn’t just a safety net — it’s a matter of life or death.
“If left to see to their ...Read more

Georgia House limits political campaigns from interacting with minors
Political campaigns in Georgia would face limits in the kind of personal information they can seek regarding students, particularly minors, under a bill that passed the House on Monday.
The legislation was spurred by a contentious state Senate race last fall between incumbent Shawn Still and challenger Ashwin Ramaswami in a district that covers...Read more

Georgia Senate passes bills targeting China and other foreign adversaries
The Georgia Senate passed two bills Monday that would restrict land purchases by citizens of countries considered a threat to the United States and require more transparency about universities that get funding from those nations.
Both bills target China, which Republican senators described as a looming threat the state needed to counter. But ...Read more

Nevada tribe's $20 million EPA grant suspended
A $20 million grant meant to strengthen a Nevada tribe’s poor access to electric power and clean water has been suspended, delaying construction timelines.
The Environmental Protection Agency awarded the money to the Nevada Clean Energy Fund in December — one of 84 projects in that round of so-called Community Change Grants. With the money,...Read more

'Devastating consequences:' State police organization says Healey's proposed mental health cuts threaten officers, civilians
The lives and safety of police officers, state residents and people in mental health crises are on the line with cuts to mental health budgets by the Healey administration, the Massachusetts Association for Professional Law Enforcement (MAPLE) said Monday.
“A proposal has been offered to cut ($85 million) from the state’s perennially ...Read more
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