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Rodríguez walks tightrope as January raid death toll in Venezuela continues to rise
Venezuela’s interim leader, Delcy Rodríguez, has confirmed the death of an army colonel she said had been wounded during the Jan. 3 U.S. military operation that led to the capture of former strongman Nicolás Maduro, as officials continued to frame the episode as both a national trauma and a rallying point.
Speaking at a political gathering ...Read more
3 tornadoes confirmed in California in a single day
LOS ANGELES — California is known for having earthquakes, wildfires and the rare tsunami, but after Tuesday you may want to add tornadoes to the conversation.
According to the National Weather Service, three separate tornadoes were confirmed in the state on Tuesday afternoon, one ripping the metal roof off a barn and snapping tree trunks in ...Read more
NASA's Roman Space Telescope ready to solve mysteries of the universe
GREENBELT, Md. — NASA’s newest space telescope is ready for its date with a Falcon Heavy rocket in September, ahead of schedule and under budget, agency officials said Tuesday.
The Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope made its public debut Tuesday at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt. Built on a similar frame as the Hubble ...Read more
It’s a sing-off! Myth-busting about birds and sex when it comes to defending the nest
Each spring, birds across America are in full voice. Cardinals chatter, sparrows sing and warblers warble. Birdsong lifts the human spirit – “‘Hope’ is the thing with feathers,” after all. Yet birds are not singing to soothe our nerves after a stressful day at the office. Instead, they sing to defend their territories and attract ...Read more
Why Trump can’t just decree changes to voting by mail – a former federal judge explains how the president’s executive order is ‘a solution looking for a problem’
John Jones knows about voter suppression. Currently the president of Dickinson College, Jones – nominated in 2002 by President George W. Bush and confirmed unanimously by the U.S. Senate – served for almost two decades as a federal court judge. In that role, Jones presided over a case, filed just prior to the November 2020 presidential ...Read more
HEPA air purifiers may boost brain power in adults over 40 – new research
Using an in-home HEPA purifier for one month spurs a small but significant improvement in brain function in adults age 40 and older. That’s the result of a new study we co-authored in the journal Scientific Reports.
HEPA purifiers – HEPA stands for high efficiency particulate air – remove particulate matter from the air. ...Read more
Rotavirus cases in children are rising – but a highly effective vaccine has slashed hospitalizations from the virus by 80% in 2 decades
Rotavirus is a highly contagious virus that spreads easily and can make babies and young children very sick. This year, doctors have been seeing more cases earlier in the season than usual.
Data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention shows that almost 8 in 100 people tested for rotavirus have the virus. This is only a ...Read more
What a Muslim folk trickster can teach us about the danger of holding a single worldview
White House Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller told CNN in January 2026 that “we live in a world … that is governed by strength, that is governed by force, that is governed by power” – what he called the “iron laws of the world.”
This “might-makes-right” mindset, which seems to permeate the Trump administration, sees...Read more
In race to prep for Artemis III, rocket's core stage on way to Kennedy Space Center
The biggest piece of rocketry needed for the next Artemis mission is headed to Florida.
While the base of the Space Launch System rocket’s core stage has been waiting at Kennedy Space Center’s Vehicle Assembly Building since last summer, the top four-fifths of what will be a 212-foot-tall piece of hardware was loaded onto NASA’s Pegasus ...Read more
War crimes court rejects bid to free Philippines' Duterte
The International Criminal Court’s appeals chamber ruled that the tribunal has jurisdiction over the case of ex-Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte’s crimes against humanity and rejected his bid for release.
The appeals chamber by a majority “has rejected all four grounds of appeal,” Judge Luz del Carmen Ibáñez Carranza said in live-...Read more
US and Iran deadlocked over Hormuz after Trump extends truce
U.S. President Donald Trump indefinitely extended a ceasefire with Iran after the two sides failed to meet for more peace talks, with the war developing into a game of brinkmanship over the critical Strait of Hormuz.
Trump said Pakistan, the main mediator between the warring sides, asked the U.S. to hold off on a threatened resumption of ...Read more
Ukraine says it asked Turkey to help seek Zelenskyy-Putin talks
Ukraine has asked Turkey to help arrange a summit meeting between President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and Russian leader Vladimir Putin in a renewed effort to end the war, Foreign Minister Andrii Sybiha said in Kyiv.
“We have addressed the Turks directly. But if another capital — other than Moscow and Belarus — organizes such a meeting, we will...Read more
Palisades reservoir that was empty during fire is dry again. Residents aren't happy about it
LOS ANGELES — The Los Angeles reservoir that was notoriously empty during the 2025 Palisades fire has been drained once again as crews replace its floating cover, to the dismay of area residents who worry that there won't be water available to fight wildfires.
The Santa Ynez Reservoir stores drinking water for Pacific Palisades, and the $19.5...Read more
Democrats demand Trump administration halt plan to collect federal workers' health data
Democratic lawmakers are demanding that the Trump administration halt plans to collect sensitive medical records for millions of federal workers and retirees, as well as their family members.
The Office of Personnel Management has asked 65 insurance companies to provide monthly reports with detailed medical and pharmaceutical claims data of ...Read more
'Unconstitutional': Idaho parents, day care sue over Medical Freedom Act
BOISE, Idaho — A Boise-based day care sued in December over the Idaho Medical Freedom Act, a controversial 2025 law that lawyers argued won’t let the facility send sick kids home or require vaccines.
The Idaho Medical Freedom Act, signed by Gov. Brad Little on the last day of the 2025 legislative session, prevents schools, businesses and ...Read more
Cuba's collapse: From Obama's historic opening to Trump's crippling embargo
HAVANA — A decade ago this spring, President Barack Obama stepped off Air Force One at José Martí International Airport — the first time a U.S. leader had touched ground in Cuba since Fidel Castro's communist revolution.
More than half a century of Cold War hostilities were thawing. The U.S. had relaxed travel restrictions to the island, ...Read more
As US birth rate falls, feds' response may make pregnancy more dangerous
The number of babies born in the United States fell again last year.
According to new data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, there were 3.6 million births in 2025, a 1% decline from 2024. The fertility rate dropped to 53.1 births per 1,000 women ages 15 to 44, down 23% since 2007.
The Trump administration has said it wants ...Read more
Why the US military is stuck using $1 million missiles against Iran’s $20,000 drones
It may sound hard to believe, but the almost trillion-dollar U.S. military is struggling to fight cheap drones in its war with Iran.
Iran has built a simple drone, the Shahed, with a motorcycle-type engine, loaded it with explosives and successfully targeted its neighbors’ cities and power plants.
Iran has also hit U.S. ...Read more
Judge orders some fundraising records released to probe conflict-of-interest claim against DA in Stanford vandalism case
SAN JOSE, Calif. — A Santa Clara County judge Monday ordered District Attorney Jeff Rosen’s fundraising records to be turned over to defense attorneys, citing the documents as necessary to determine whether the prosecutor has a conflict of interest that should bar him and his entire office from retrying a felony vandalism case against five ...Read more
Navy SEAL Museum proposed near San Diego Bay advances with high praise
SAN DIEGO — A proposal to build a striking, $256 million Navy SEAL Museum opposite San Diego Bay at 1220 Pacific Highway elicited an enthusiastic response from the government body that controls the downtown waterfront.
On Tuesday, the Board of Port Commissioners for the San Diego Unified Port District voted unanimously to initiate the state-...Read more
Popular Stories
- Why Trump can’t just decree changes to voting by mail – a former federal judge explains how the president’s executive order is ‘a solution looking for a problem’
- What a Muslim folk trickster can teach us about the danger of holding a single worldview
- US and Iran deadlocked over Hormuz after Trump extends truce
- It’s a sing-off! Myth-busting about birds and sex when it comes to defending the nest
- War crimes court rejects bid to free Philippines' Duterte





