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- [[Los Angeles Times]]
- Beijing is taking note of U.S. stumbles in Iran war
- Conflict offers China a chance to flex on world stage
- A U.S. C-17 lands at Beijing Capital International Airport ahead of President Trump’s visit this week.
- Democratic elders face new voices in races
- The House challenges underline debate over generational power, the party’s direction.
- A GOP feud in a rare red district
- Redrawn Southland House map pits Reps. Kim and Calvert.They are going all-in.
- Virus anxiety rises as travelers return
- Hantavirus isn’t easily transmitted; four Californians exposed are back in the U.S.
- Scrutiny over LA28’s pledge to protect human rights at Games
- Olympics organizer has a strategy, but some groups say it falls short
- SPENT cartridges are shown at LA Clays Shooting Sports Park, a 2028 Olympics site in South El Monte.
- Mayor faces 10 years, resigns over China ties
- Arcadia’s Eileen Wang aided propaganda as a foreign agent prior to time in office, feds say.
- Primarily dissatisfied
- A political consultant leads effort to return to the state’s traditional voting system.
- Beijing is taking note of U.S. stumbles in Iran war
- [[USA Today]]
- Here’s where Earth’s glow is growing
- NASA shows how light pollution in some areas has gotten worse
- Our night sky is getting brighter and brighter – not because of the moon, but because of artificial lighting. ● While outdoor lighting is a necessary part of modern society, its widespread use has reshaped natural darkness, affected human and animal health and made the night sky harder to see. ● According to a new study that analyzed a combination of satellite images, artificial nighttime lights have brightened Earth by 16% between 2014 and 2022. Researchers from University of Connecticut found that nights are gradually becoming brighter worldwide, though trends vary by region, particularly in areas affected by war or natural disasters. The findings were published in Nature. ● In 2022, the United States had by far the highest total luminosity of any country, followed by China, India, Canada and Brazil. ● “For decades, we’ve held a simplified view that the Earth at night is just getting steadily brighter as human population and economies grow,” said senior author of the study Zhe Zhu, director of the University of Connecticut’s Global Environmental Remote Sensing Laboratory. “The planet’s lighting footprint is constantly expanding, contracting and shifting,” Zhu said.
- 2 more travelers on ship positive
- 1 American among the ill of deadly cruise outbreak
- Nearly 150 people from 23 countries were on board the MV Hondius when severe respiratory illnesses among passengers was first reported on May 3.
- Infighting hinders Trump’s agenda
- GOP drama in Congress could affect midterms
- GOP drama is causing typically painless procedural votes to drag for hours for Speaker of the House Mike Johnson.
- DOJ changed status of pot, but that hasn’t made it legal
- Here’s where Earth’s glow is growing
- [[The New York Times]]
- What Asia Fears Most On Summit
- Sweeping Trade Deal May Imperil Security
- Polish soldiers on exercises in a South Korean-made tank.
- NEWS ANALYSIS
- As Xi Elevated His Generals, Doubts Grew
- Expansive Purge After Remolding Military
- They’re Wanted in Colombia: Escobar’s Hippos
- Some Love the Unruly Herd. Others Back a Euthanasia Plan.
- Hippopotamuses have multiplied along the Magdalena River since the downfall of Pablo Escobar, who kept the exotic animals as pets.
- Lone Infusion Has Potential To Curb H.I.V.
- A $13 Million Paint Job
- The Lincoln Memorial pool update will now cost seven times as much as first promised.
- In Eurovision, Israel Used Soft Power to Burnish Its Ailing Image
- A Broad and Prolonged Effort to Sway Votes
- A.I. Push and Layoffs at Meta Pile Misery on Its Work Force
- What Asia Fears Most On Summit
- [[Wall Street Journal]]
- An Insider-Trading Scandal Rocks Elite M&A Law Firms
- Job-hopping lawyer accessed files to tip off pending deals, prosecutors say
- Florida Is the Future Of Elite Teen Sports
- High-school transfers have surged in era of big college paydays for athletes
- Jobs at OpenAI Turned Into Huge Jackpots for Employees
- U.S., Iran Locked in Gray Zone Between War, Peace
- Cease-fire is on ‘life support,’ Trump says, but neither side looks eager to fight for now
- Microsoft CEO Testifies in Musk v. Altman
- TECH SHOWDOWN: Microsoft’s Satya Nadella, left, arrived Monday at federal court in Oakland, Calif., to take the witness stand in Elon Musk’s lawsuit against OpenAI. Nadella testified about the AI company’s temporary firing of Sam Altman in 2023.
- Repo Men Come for Spirit’s Jets
- Airline’s collapse kicked off strange recovery mission
- Home Sales Extend Slump
- Home sales were flat in April, rising 0.2% over the previous month to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 4.02 million. That slight gain marked a reversal from March, when home sales dropped a revised 2.9%. But April numbers were below expectations of a 3% increase.
- An Insider-Trading Scandal Rocks Elite M&A Law Firms
- [[Financial Times]] 영국에 위치한 니케이 소유 회사입니다.
- Macron in Africa as crowded field gathers at home to succeed French leader
- Emmanuel Macron jogs past the University of Nairobi yesterday ahead of the Africa Forward summit in the city.
- Fuel reserves near ‘critically low’ level, says Saudi Aramco
- ▸ Fresh alarm over Hormuz strait crisis ▸ 100mn barrels of oil lost each week
- ECB official attacks Berlin’s ‘meddling’ in UniCredit move for Commerzbank
- One of Europe’s top central bankers has attacked the German government for opposing Italian lender UniCredit’s takeover bid for Commerzbank, warning that such interventions in crossborder deals go against the spirit of the EU single market.
- Americans face $25bn bill as cost of Iran war mounts
- The costs of Donald Trump’s Iran war are ripping across the US economy, causing hundreds of billions of dollars in lost output, skyrocketing fuel prices, rising borrowing costs and supply chain snags that are hitting Americans’ prosperity. Official estimates have put the direct price tag to taxpayers at $25bn, but economists foresee a larger toll. ‘War remakes the economy in really fundamental, profound and expensive ways,’ says one academic.
- Macron in Africa as crowded field gathers at home to succeed French leader