Category: Everydaynews


  • Guantánamo Bay Prepares for President Trump’s Migrant Surge

    About 200 Marines and soldiers landed at Guantánamo Bay over the weekend to provide security and begin setting up at a new tent city for migrants, as officials comply with President Trump’s order to prepare the Navy base for as many as 30,000 deportees. The small base in southeast Cuba is on the verge of…

  • Dynamic Black Marching Bands Are Super Bowl Stalwarts

    Long before Michael Jackson, the Rolling Stones and Rihanna, there was Freddie Colston. Colston was just a 20-year-old student from tiny Fairbanks, La., when he traveled to Los Angeles in January 1967. He had grown up in a home without indoor plumbing, but now he was staying in lavish accommodations with about 180 other members…

  • With Trump’s Backing Uncertain, Europe Scrambles to Shore Up Its Own Defenses

    Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine three years ago convinced Europe’s leaders that they needed to spend more money on defense. On Monday, leaders from across the European Union and Britain will meet in Brussels to debate a vexing question: how to pay for it. It is a concern made more acute by President Trump’s return…

  • Standoff at Ukrainian Agency Disrupts Arms Contracts, Suppliers Say

    More than a week after it began, a standoff between Ukraine’s defense minister and the official overseeing weapons procurement remains unresolved and is beginning to disrupt arms contracts, Ukrainian defense companies say. Ukraine’s arms industry trade group has said that more than 80 defense companies, accounting for about a third of last year’s supplies to…

  • The Grammy Looks Bring a Welcome Hit of Joy

    It would have been understandable — even natural — if the attendees of Sunday night’s Grammy Awards had decided to go subdued. If they had opted to appear toned down and quietly respectful of the trauma still being visited on Los Angeles in the wake of the wild fires, in simple black suits and equally…

  • Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists Names Alexandra Bell Its New President

    At the end of January, the keepers of the Doomsday Clock announced that the world was 89 seconds to midnight, a metaphor for our proximity to extinction. That’s one second closer than we were for the past two years, and the nearest the clock has ever inched to global destruction by way of human-made risks,…

  • Crews Lift First Wreckage From D.C. Plane Crash Out of Potomac

    Salvage crews began lifting the wreckage of American Airlines Flight 5342 from the Potomac River in Washington on Monday morning, the start of an operation that was expected to take three days. Just after 10 a.m. Eastern, the first piece of wreckage appeared. A crane perched on a barge in the middle of the river…

  • Stocks Fall Around the World as Trump Tariffs Loom

    President Trump’s decision to impose sweeping tariffs on some of America’s largest trading partners sent shock waves through markets across the globe on Monday. The dollar strengthened, oil prices rose and major stock indexes in the United States fell at the start of trading on Monday, with the S&P 500 down roughly 1.5 percent, and…

  • One Response to Trump’s Tariffs: Trade That Excludes the U.S.

    In May, the 10-country Association of Southeast Asian Nations, known as ASEAN, will meet the six Middle Eastern nations that make up the Gulf Cooperation Council. The summit’s host, Malaysia, has invited China to attend. China is also poised to update its own free-trade agreement with ASEAN, which includes Cambodia, the Philippines, Indonesia and Vietnam.…

  • Over 1,000 EPA Workers on Climate Change and More Could Be Fired ‘Immediately’

    The Trump administration has warned more than 1,100 Environmental Protection Agency employees who work on climate change, reducing air pollution, enforcing environmental laws and other programs that they could be fired at any time. An email, reviewed by The New York Times, was sent to staff members who were hired within the past year and…