Category: Everydaynews


  • What We Know About the Plane and Helicopter Crash Near Washington, D.C.

    The accident raised concerns about aviation safety. Investigators from the National Transportation Safety Board, an independent federal agency, are leading the inquiry into the collision. Officials said they would look at the flight data from the two aircraft, review traffic control communications and conduct interviews. Teams have recovered two so-called black boxes from the plane…

  • Opinion | If Kennedy Is Blind to Science, Why Entrust Him With Our Health?

    Robert F. Kennedy Jr. used to impress me. In the early 2000s, he did excellent work as an environmental lawyer taking on industrial hog farms that were fouling creeks and rivers, and we talked about making a visit together to North Carolina to document the pollution. But then Kennedy began to urge me to write…

  • Trump Officials Release Water That Experts Say Will Serve Little Use

    Trump administration officials began releasing significant amounts of water from two dams in California’s Central Valley on Friday in a move that seemed intended to make a political point as President Trump continued to falsely blame the Los Angeles wildfires on water policies in the Democratic-run state. The releases, as ordered, have sent water toward…

  • Palisades and Eaton Fires Are Fully Contained

    More than three weeks after the devastating Eaton and Palisades fires broke out in Southern California, state officials on Friday evening said that firefighters had fully contained both fires, meaning that the perimeters of the fires were completely under control. Evacuation orders had already been lifted, and for more than a week the fires have…

  • How Trump’s Tariffs Could Affect the U.S., Canada and Mexico

    Decades of trade integration across North America are on the precipice of major disruption by tariffs that President Trump said he wants to impose on Canada and Mexico, the United States’ top trading partners, as soon as Saturday. And while tariffs are predicted to inflict pain on all three nations, they would cause more damage…

  • Review: In Justin Peck’s New Dance, Air, Earth and Self-Help

    Justin Peck’s newest work for New York City Ballet, his 25th, is called “Mystic Familiar,” a title that turns out to be telling. Those two words encapsulate the rise and fall of its aspirations and limitations. It’s a dance that tries to be mystic, but mostly it’s just familiar. The title is borrowed from an…

  • Invasive Crabs Have Taken Over New England. One Solution? Eat Them.

    Bun Lai, a chef who has advocated for invasive-crab consumption for more than 20 years, stood in a food-preparation zone that he calls his “lab,” checking on small crabs in a dehydrator. A print of Picasso’s “Don Quixote” hung on a wall. Lai’s lab is one part of Miya’s in the Woods, a private embassy…

  • Gaza’s Border Crossing at Rafah Reopens to Let Sick and Wounded Leave

    Israel has resisted the notion that the Palestinian Authority would control postwar Gaza, despite the urging of the Biden administration. President Trump’s vision for who might rule the enclave after the conflict remains unclear. The office of Benjamin Netanyahu, the Israeli prime minister, said that the “practical involvement of the Palestinian Authority” would be only…

  • Beneath Trump’s Chaotic Spending Freeze: An Idea That Crosses Party Lines

    When President Trump said on Wednesday that his order to freeze federal spending was about “scams, dishonesty, waste and abuse,” he was echoing promises made by his predecessors in both parties. Yes, the memo was a sweeping attempt to remake what he calls a “woke” government in his image. Yes, it was part of his…

  • Chuck Todd Is Leaving NBC

    Chuck Todd, the former “Meet the Press” moderator and a longtime fixture of NBC’s political coverage, told colleagues on Friday that he was leaving the network. A nearly two-decade veteran of NBC, Mr. Todd said that Friday would be his last day at NBC. “There’s never a perfect time to leave a place that’s been…