Author: Admin

  • DOJ Pays $1.25M to Former Trump Campaign Aide Over FBI Surveillance Errors

    DOJ Pays $1.25M to Former Trump Campaign Aide Over FBI Surveillance Errors

    WASHINGTON – Federal authorities have agreed to pay $1.25 million to resolve a legal dispute with Carter Page, a former aide to Donald Trump’s 2016 presidential campaign who challenged FBI surveillance conducted during the Russia investigation.

    Page filed his legal challenge in 2020, claiming federal agents subjected him to “unlawful spying” while investigating potential coordination between Trump’s campaign and Russian officials to influence the 2016 election. His lawsuit pointed to numerous mistakes and missing information in documents that FBI and Justice Department personnel presented to the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court in 2016 and 2017 when seeking permission to monitor Page based on suspicions he was working as a Russian operative.

    Page strongly rejected any allegations of inappropriate connections to Russia and never faced criminal charges.

    Lower courts dismissed Page’s case, with appeals court judges ruling in 2023 that he had filed his complaint beyond the allowable time limit. However, while Page’s appeal was before the Supreme Court, Trump administration officials notified the high court on Wednesday that they had reached an agreement with Page regarding his claims against the federal government. The resolution does not address Page’s separate claims against individual former FBI personnel he also sued.

    The Supreme Court filing did not disclose the financial terms, but a source with knowledge of the matter, who requested anonymity to discuss confidential information, confirmed the settlement amount was $1.25 million.

    Page’s legal action came after a scathing Justice Department inspector general review that identified substantial flaws in all four surveillance requests. Former FBI and Justice Department executives who approved the monitoring have since stated they would not have authorized it if they had understood the scope of the problems, and the FBI has implemented over 40 reforms designed to enhance the precision and completeness of future applications.

    While the warrant application issues were serious, the surveillance of Page represented only a small fraction of the broader investigation into connections between Trump’s campaign and Russia.

    Special counsel Robert Mueller’s investigation determined that Russia had interfered in the 2016 election to benefit Trump and that the campaign accepted this help. Mueller’s prosecutors concluded they lacked adequate evidence to prove a criminal conspiracy between the campaign and Russian officials.

    In March, the Justice Department resolved another case stemming from the Trump-Russia investigation, agreeing to pay approximately $1.2 million to Michael Flynn, Trump’s former national security adviser who admitted to lying to federal agents about his communications with a senior Russian official before receiving a presidential pardon.

  • Buffalo Sabres Struggle with Power Play Woes as Playoff Series Heads to Boston

    Buffalo Sabres Struggle with Power Play Woes as Playoff Series Heads to Boston

    BOSTON (AP) — Buffalo’s inability to dominate Boston physically on the ice has become a secondary concern compared to their struggles capitalizing on power play opportunities when the Bruins commit penalties.

    Through the opening two contests of their playoff matchup with Boston, the Sabres have failed to convert on all nine man-advantage situations, extending a troubling trend that saw them go scoreless on their final 22 power plays during the regular season’s closing seven games. The series stands even at one game apiece as action moves to Boston for Thursday evening’s third game.

    “It’s always a concern, for sure,” Sabres head coach Lindy Ruff acknowledged, noting his team hasn’t celebrated a power-play goal since March. “I think we’ll have to tweak some things.”

    Buffalo entered this series taking exception to comments from Bruins coach Marco Sturm about his team’s physical superiority. Tuesday’s contest featured multiple altercations and accumulated 94 combined penalty minutes, with neither squad backing down from the confrontation.

    “It’s a seven-game series so you see those guys all the time and there’s game inside the game, obviously,” Bruins defenseman Nikita Zadorov explained. “Emotions are really high, everybody wants to win, everybody is competitive on the ice, so sometimes you just ended up in the scrums and the fights like that.”

    Ruff hasn’t dismissed the possibility of making a goaltending switch after pulling Ukko-Pekka Luukkonen just 16 seconds into Game 2’s final period following the fourth goal against him — including one scored on a long dump-in from center ice. Relief goaltender Alex Lyon successfully turned away all seven shots he encountered afterward.

    While both netminders split starting duties during the regular season, Luukkonen secured the primary role by posting a 12-2-1 record to close the campaign. Lyon missed the season’s final week due to an undisclosed lower-body ailment after compiling a 20-10-4 record.

    Though Ruff declined to pin Game 2’s defeat solely on Luukkonen’s inconsistent performance, stating “we win together, we lose together,” he also noted that “(Lyon) may play next game.”

    Buffalo’s slow starts have compounded their difficulties, falling behind 2-0 in the opener and 4-0 in Game 2, managing their first goals only in each contest’s final eight minutes. They mounted a successful 4-3 comeback in Game 1 but couldn’t overcome their deficit in the 4-2 Game 2 loss.

    “It’s been two games. It’s nothing to freak out about, and we know that,” forward Zach Benson said. “And we know we’ve got to be better, and we will be.”

    Game 3 is scheduled for Thursday at 7 p.m. ET on TNT.

    In other playoff action, the Carolina Hurricanes hold a 2-0 series advantage over Ottawa, with the Senators showing strength in faceoff wins (60.7% through two games) and goaltending from Linus Ullmark. Carolina forward Logan Stankoven acknowledged their faceoff struggles, saying “Obviously our percentage isn’t great. I’ve got to try and keep winning as many draws and stay in the battle as much as possible.”

    The Colorado Avalanche also lead their series 2-0 against Los Angeles, with the Kings remaining optimistic despite the deficit. “Play the same way we’re playing, just a little harder,” Kings forward Trevor Moore said. “Just try to take the positives and get to LA and play a good game.”

  • Pittsburgh Hosts 2026 NFL Draft as Perfect Metaphor for Players’ Journey

    Pittsburgh Hosts 2026 NFL Draft as Perfect Metaphor for Players’ Journey

    PITTSBURGH — For aspiring NFL players, the journey to draft day can seem never-ending. After years of dedication and weeks of intense evaluations, these young athletes face nerve-wracking days of uncertainty as they await the moment their names are announced.

    That wait concludes this weekend as the 2026 draft arrives in Pittsburgh, a city that perfectly symbolizes the NFL’s premier offseason showcase.

    Most visitors entering the Steel City navigate through western Pennsylvania’s rolling hills and suburban landscapes before descending into the Fort Pitt tunnel — 3,614 feet of darkness that reveals nothing about what awaits beyond. The journey typically involves heavy traffic regardless of the hour, puzzling even longtime residents.

    Getting to downtown Pittsburgh, much like reaching the NFL, requires persistence. However, once you arrive, the payoff can be spectacular as the city unfolds before you, filled with potential — just like each draft candidate’s future.

    Notre Dame running back Jeremiyah Love, who hopes to join the exclusive group of running backs selected in the top 10 over recent years, was impressed during his visit this week.

    “Nice views, nice views,” Love commented on Wednesday, just over a day before Thursday evening’s opening round. “When you came out of that little tunnel or whatever, I don’t know what the tunnel’s called, but you kind of just saw the whole city. So that view was really nice.”

    Love and 16 other potential first-round selections will experience an even more meaningful sight: walking the red carpet at Point State Park before taking a brief ferry trip across the Allegheny River to Acrisure Stadium, home of the Pittsburgh Steelers. Their ultimate destination will be the draft stage for that career-defining embrace with NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell.

    “I’m ready to go somewhere where I can work, whether that’s the worst team, the best team, maybe a team in the middle,” Love stated. “Really doesn’t matter to me.”

    Love’s destination remains uncertain. However, Heisman Trophy winner Fernando Mendoza’s path appears clear.

    Everything suggests the Las Vegas Raiders will rush to select the Indiana quarterback with the top pick, though Mendoza won’t meet Goodell in Pittsburgh. The standout signal-caller chose to watch from home rather than participate in the draft’s grand spectacle.

    The remainder of the first round remains unpredictable, though defensive players are expected to dominate, with edge rushers Arnell Reese from Ohio State and David Bailey from Texas Tech — both present in Pittsburgh — likely to turn professional as evening falls over Mount Washington.

    When asked if his competitive nature drives him to want the first handshake with Goodell, Bailey revealed the blend of instinct and football intelligence that elevated his draft status.

    “When you talk about competitiveness in that context, it’s like really nothing you can do,” Bailey explained. “Like I can’t go out there and do any special tricks or say anything that’s going to boost my draft stock. … I feel like it’s time to just sit back and enjoy.”

    This marks the end of countless speculation cycles and mock drafts, allowing everyone to return to actual football. The process can be overwhelming.

    Arizona State wide receiver Jordyn Tyson understands the situation.

    While posing in underwear for scouts and performing various physical tests at the NFL combine might seem odd, Tyson accepts the process.

    “(Teams) invest a lot of money, so they got to do the research,” Tyson observed. “They got to take every little thing into account. So I don’t blame them for it, to be honest.”

    Host cities also must prepare extensively for draft weekend. For locations like Pittsburgh, hosting the draft serves as a prestigious alternative to Super Bowl hosting duties.

    The NFL anticipates hundreds of thousands of fans will flood a city not known for abundant open spaces. Pittsburgh’s public schools switched to remote learning Thursday and Friday to reduce bus traffic, while many employers encouraged remote work instead of office attendance.

    The draft has transformed dramatically since Pittsburgh last hosted in December 1947 at the Fort Pitt Hotel, then the Steelers’ headquarters. That 32-round event saw quarterback Harry Gilmer selected first overall by Washington, but no ceremonial jersey awaited him.

    The 1947 draft received no television coverage and minimal attention. The landscape surrounding the draft has shifted enormously over eight decades.

    Pittsburgh sees the draft as an opportunity to highlight the region’s rich football heritage. Nearly two dozen Hall of Famers originated from Western Pennsylvania. The Steelers pass six Lombardi Trophies daily on their way to work, and football at every level remains deeply embedded in local culture.

    Wednesday morning featured Love and fellow prospects conducting a youth clinic after a ribbon-cutting ceremony for a new turf field at Hazelwood Green Park, approximately one mile down the Monongahela River from the Steelers’ current training facility.

    Steelers President Art Rooney II spent years looking out his window at the empty lot, wondering when development would come to an area being transformed by technology and education sectors.

    Once the city secured draft hosting rights, progress accelerated rapidly. This reflects Pittsburgh’s broader evolution from the 20th century’s Steel City into today’s innovation center.

    The draft will fulfill one dream while launching another for the 257 players selected by Saturday evening’s conclusion.

    For the “City of Bridges,” the event provides a platform to demonstrate that while Pittsburgh’s football heritage runs deep, the city connects to much more than first downs and touchdowns.

    “I think if you were going to pick a perfect time,” Mayor Corey O’Connor said, “this is the perfect time.”

  • Delaware Women’s Lacrosse Captures ASUN Championship in Debut Season

    Delaware Women’s Lacrosse Captures ASUN Championship in Debut Season

    LYNCHBURG, Va. – The University of Delaware women’s lacrosse squad delivered a dominant performance Wednesday afternoon, crushing Liberty 17-5 to capture the Atlantic Sun Conference Regular Season Championship in their debut year in the league.

    Five Blue Hens players scored multiple goals in the lopsided victory, showcasing the team’s offensive depth and firepower. The commanding win secured Delaware’s first ASUN regular season title and marked a successful transition to their new conference home.

    The Blue Hens’ impressive inaugural ASUN campaign culminated with this championship-clinching performance on the road in Lynchburg, Virginia. Delaware’s offensive explosion overwhelmed the Liberty defense as the team made history in its first year of Atlantic Sun Conference competition.

  • Seattle Pitcher’s Jersey Makes Incredible Catch in Bizarre Baseball Play

    Seattle Pitcher’s Jersey Makes Incredible Catch in Bizarre Baseball Play

    SEATTLE — In what may be one of baseball’s strangest defensive plays, Seattle Mariners pitcher Logan Gilbert’s uniform made an unexpected catch during Wednesday’s game against the Oakland Athletics.

    During the opening inning with a runner positioned at third base, Oakland’s Carlos Cortes smashed a hard-hit ball directly toward the right-handed pitcher. The baseball mysteriously became trapped inside Gilbert’s jersey fabric.

    Gilbert immediately clutched his midsection and spun around searching for the baseball while Cortes sprinted toward first base, eventually discovering the ball had somehow been snared by his own clothing.

    Official scorers awarded Cortes a base hit since the play was ruled dead upon contact, though Nick Kurtz stayed put at third base. Shea Langeliers moved up to second base during the unusual sequence.

    Broadcast measurements showed the screaming line drive traveling at 107.8 miles per hour.

    Mariners head athletic trainer Kyle Torgerson conducted a quick medical evaluation of Gilbert, who was cleared to continue playing and completed the inning. The pitcher ultimately surrendered two earned runs during the frame on Tyler Soderstrom’s sacrifice fly and Jeff McNeil’s run-scoring single.

    Gilbert took the mound again for the following inning without further incident.

  • Lufthansa Slashes 20,000 Flights as Iran War Drives Up Fuel Costs

    Lufthansa Slashes 20,000 Flights as Iran War Drives Up Fuel Costs

    Germany’s Lufthansa Group announced Tuesday it will eliminate 20,000 short-distance flights through October as ongoing conflict with Iran sends oil prices soaring and raises concerns about potential jet fuel shortages across multiple nations.

    The aviation giant said removing these less profitable routes, primarily affecting operations at Frankfurt and Munich airports, will conserve roughly 40,000 metric tons of jet fuel.

    Last week, the company permanently closed CityLine, one of its regional subsidiaries, as part of cost-cutting efforts. The airline group indicated that a “planned consolidation” across its European operations will impact Lufthansa Airlines, Austrian Airlines, Brussels Airlines, SWISS and ITA Airways, along with major hubs in Brussels, Rome, Vienna and Zurich.

    Jet fuel costs have more than doubled in certain markets since late February when hostilities began with American and Israeli military actions against Iran. Aviation companies face particular vulnerability to fuel price volatility since jet fuel represents one of their most significant operational costs.

    Passengers are already experiencing reduced flight availability on certain routes and increased fees as the busy summer travel season approaches, with numerous carriers implementing higher baggage charges or additional fuel surcharges.

    Military action near the Strait of Hormuz, a critical waterway along Iran’s coastline through which approximately 20% of global oil shipments typically flow, has caused worldwide disruption to fuel pricing and availability.

    On April 16, the International Energy Agency director estimated that Europe maintains roughly six weeks of remaining jet fuel reserves and warned that airlines would begin removing routes from their schedules without additional supplies.

    Lufthansa stated it has obtained sufficient jet fuel “for the coming weeks” and is “pursuing a range of measures” to maintain steady fuel availability through summer months, “including the physical procurement of jet fuel.”

    The German carrier joins numerous other airlines reducing their operations.

    Aviation analytics company Cirium reports that all except one of the globe’s 20 largest airlines have canceled scheduled May departures across every major region.

    Along with Lufthansa, affected carriers include Delta Air Lines, United Airlines, American Airlines, Air Canada, Emirates, Qatar Airways, Air China, British Airways and Air France-KLM, according to Cirium data.

    Last week, Swiss-based Edelweiss Air revealed it would discontinue service to Denver and Seattle during summer months while reducing Las Vegas flights through early fall.

    Air New Zealand is reducing approximately 4% of its May and June flight schedule.

    “Like airlines globally, we’re experiencing jet fuel prices that are more than double what they would usually be,” the carrier stated.

    Global jet fuel prices jumped from approximately $99 per barrel in late February to peaks of $209 per barrel in early April.

  • California Senate Advances Bills to Shield ICE Detainees in Hospitals

    California Senate Advances Bills to Shield ICE Detainees in Hospitals

    State legislators in California, troubled by reports of mistreatment involving immigration detainees at medical facilities, are advancing measures designed to enhance safeguards for patients brought to hospitals by federal immigration officers.

    Two pieces of legislation currently progressing through California’s Senate aim to stop immigration enforcement personnel from cutting off detained patients from family contact and blocking access to legal representation. Legislative analyses for both proposals reference investigative reporting by KFF Health News that documented significant challenges faced by relatives and lawyers trying to locate and assist hospitalized individuals held in immigration detention.

    The KFF Health News investigation revealed that certain medical facilities have enabled patient isolation through what are termed blackout policies, which may involve registering individuals using false names, excluding their names from hospital directories, and barring staff from alerting patients’ families about their location and medical status.

    Legislation introduced by Democratic state Sen. Caroline Menjivar from the San Fernando Valley, designated SB 915, would mostly ban blackout policies for immigration detainees and guarantee their right to have family members and others informed about their location and medical condition. Such policies would only be permitted when healthcare providers determine a patient poses a documented credible threat to themselves or others, with that risk recorded in medical files. The measure would also guarantee patients’ visitation rights.

    The proposal addresses documented cases of Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers standing guard over patients during medical examinations and physician consultations, meddling in treatment decisions, and pressuring for early discharge to detention centers lacking adequate follow-up medical capabilities.

    “These are actions that have no place in health care, and it is a clear violation of the patients’ rights,” Menjivar said.

    Menjivar’s legislation would bar agents from entering patient rooms unless they can demonstrate legal authority for their presence. When agents remain present, medical staff would be required to request their departure during examinations and care discussions. Healthcare facility personnel would need to document instances when agents refuse to leave.

    SB 1323, introduced by state Sen. Susan Rubio, a Democrat representing the San Gabriel Valley, would mandate that healthcare providers educate staff and appropriate volunteers about responding when patients request family notification, and require posting notices at facility entrances detailing visitation and access procedures. While existing law permits patients to consent to family notification of their hospitalization, Rubio’s measure seeks to ensure staff understand this applies to immigration detainees as well.

    The federal Department of Homeland Security, which manages immigration enforcement operations, did not provide comment when contacted.

    Both measures passed Senate Health and Judiciary committees on party-line votes and await consideration by the Senate Appropriations Committee.

    Over 20 immigrant advocacy organizations and healthcare professionals expressed support for enhanced patient protections during a recent committee hearing.

    “This state must do everything in its power to protect against these abuses and ensure detainees have the right to contact their loved ones when they are hospitalized and in critical conditions,” said Hector Pereyra, political manager with the Inland Coalition for Immigrant Justice.

    Representatives from the California Hospital Association and California Medical Association expressed concerns to lawmakers that requiring healthcare workers to record agents’ identification numbers and ask them to exit patient rooms could generate confrontations and create safety hazards.

    “While we understand that this is an important issue, we want to ensure the bill strikes the right balance and does not create conflicting or unclear obligations for hospitals and their staff and clinicians, particularly in real-time interactions with federal officers,” said Vanessa Gonzalez, a vice president of state advocacy for the hospital association.

    KFF Health News documented the case of 43-year-old Julio César Peña, who remained at a Victorville hospital for nearly two weeks before his legal counsel and family discovered his whereabouts. Peña, who suffered from terminal kidney disease, was restrained to his hospital bed, monitored by immigration agents, and instructed not to reveal his location, his wife reported. He subsequently experienced a seizure requiring intubation and rendering him unconscious, yet his family received no notification. Peña passed away on February 25, fewer than two months after being released to return home.

    Immigration advocates, healthcare professionals, and legislators worry similar situations are occurring throughout California.

    Menjivar explained her legislation “seeks to close the gap between existing law and practice by empowering health care provider entities with the tools to uphold the privacy, health, and visitation rights of a patient brought in under immigration custody.”

    SB 915 would prevent hospitals and clinics from permitting immigration officers to make patient treatment decisions or serve as interpreters. Medical facilities would be required to document and verify immigration officers’ identities when feasible, ensure patients have access to communication devices, and educate patients about their rights. Facilities would also need to conduct discharge planning that includes coordination efforts with receiving facilities like detention centers to guarantee continued patient care.

    These measures follow legislation enacted last year designed to restrict immigration enforcement at medical facilities, including prohibiting healthcare establishments from admitting federal agents lacking valid search warrants or court orders into private areas. However, that previous law did not cover circumstances involving patients already in immigration detention.

    “ICE has instilled fear in our hospitals and has kept us from doing our job,” said SatKartar Khalsa, an emergency medicine resident at a safety net hospital in San Francisco who has treated detained patients and testified in support of SB 915. “This has all led to worse care for our patients and has added another layer of fear among health care workers.”

  • Goldey-Beacom Baseball Suffers Double Defeat to Wilmington Despite Regional Ranking

    Goldey-Beacom Baseball Suffers Double Defeat to Wilmington Despite Regional Ranking

    The Goldey-Beacom Lightning baseball squad encountered a challenging day on the diamond during their yearly visit to face Wilmington University, suffering defeats in both ends of a doubleheader.

    The Lightning fell to their Central Atlantic Collegiate Conference rivals by scores of 10-4 in the opener and 5-0 in the nightcap, with both contests taking place in New Castle, Delaware.

    The disappointing results came even as Goldey-Beacom maintains its position in the NCAA East Region rankings, highlighting the competitive nature of conference play in the CACC.

  • UMES Hawks Complete Doubleheader Sweep Behind Calvin and Lilly Home Runs

    UMES Hawks Complete Doubleheader Sweep Behind Calvin and Lilly Home Runs

    The University of Maryland Eastern Shore softball squad put together a commanding performance on the diamond, sweeping both ends of a doubleheader behind powerful offensive displays from Calvin and Lilly, who each launched home runs during the twin bill.

    The Hawks demonstrated their strength throughout both contests, with complete game efforts from their pitching staff helping to secure the pair of victories. The stellar pitching performances complemented the offensive firepower that Calvin and Lilly provided with their long balls.

    This doubleheader sweep represents another solid outing for the UMES softball program as they continue building momentum through their season. The combination of strong pitching and timely hitting proved to be the winning formula for the Hawks in both games.

  • Stock Market Hits New Records Despite Iran War, High Gas Prices

    Stock Market Hits New Records Despite Iran War, High Gas Prices

    NEW YORK — The numbers don’t seem to add up. While Americans grapple with costly fuel and uncertainty about the ongoing Iran conflict, Wall Street keeps climbing to unprecedented heights.

    For financial markets, the answer lies in one fundamental principle: corporate profits drive stock values. Companies are currently generating such impressive earnings that investors continue paying premium prices for shares in American businesses.

    The journey has been turbulent for many investors who may have considered selling their holdings when the S&P 500 dropped almost 10% from its previous peak last month. However, as it has throughout its entire history, the benchmark index that anchors countless retirement accounts has once again rewarded those who stayed the course. The index reached a new record of 7,137.90 on Wednesday.

    Below is an examination of the factors driving this unexpected market resilience:

    While stock values fluctuate constantly for countless reasons, the fundamental drivers over time remain consistent: corporate earnings and investor willingness to pay for those profits.

    The second element typically varies with interest rate changes and the balance between investor optimism and anxiety.

    During the conflict’s early stages, fear dominated and share prices plummeted. Markets worried that sustained oil price increases from the war might trigger devastating inflation across the global economy.

    Rising interest rates also pressured stock values as investors feared inflation concerns would prevent the Federal Reserve and other central banks from reducing short-term rates. Lower rates can stimulate economic growth but may also fuel inflation.

    Beginning in late March, expectations grew that the United States and Iran might prevent the worst economic outcomes. Both nations have economic incentives for resolution, and for Iranian leadership, ending the conflict could mean political survival.

    The ceasefire both countries reached this month remains in effect, though fragile.

    This shift from extreme fear is also evident in oil markets. Brent crude, the global benchmark, surged from approximately $70 before hostilities to $119 at peak anxiety levels. Prices have since retreated and hovered around $100 Wednesday.

    Attention has centered on the Strait of Hormuz, the critical passage for oil tankers leaving the Persian Gulf. Continued Iranian closure of the strait, combined with ongoing U.S. naval blockades of Iranian vessels, would harm all parties. Global customers would lose oil access while Iran would forfeit crude sales revenue.

    “By denying Iran its oil-related revenue, traders may be thinking that the economic war may be more effective in getting concessions from Iran’s regime than was the kinetic war only, and that this will end the war sooner, rather than later,” said Thierry Wizman, a strategist at Macquarie Group.

    Wall Street traders are also wagering on potential Federal Reserve rate cuts later this year. While they see much lower odds than before the conflict began, according to CME Group data, they’re no longer concerned about possible rate increases.

    With diminished fear, investors have refocused on the primary stock price component: earnings. Those results have been impressive.

    More than 15% of S&P 500 companies have already disclosed first-quarter 2026 profits, with the overwhelming majority surpassing analyst projections. This includes diverse firms from Citigroup to J.B. Hunt Transport Services to UnitedHealth Group.

    If remaining companies simply meet analyst forecasts, S&P 500 earnings will finish approximately 14% above year-earlier levels, according to FactSet.

    These figures encompass a full month of wartime conditions, and while companies express continued caution about potential conflict-related risks, their earnings show minimal impact.

    Bank of America CEO Brian Moynihan noted last week that “we saw healthy client activity, including solid consumer spending and stable asset quality, indicating a resilient American economy.”

    This occurs despite many American families expressing concern about higher gasoline costs and broader price increases from tariffs, as recent surveys indicate.

    Analysts have actually increased their profit expectations for S&P 500 firms since the war started. They’re predicting 20% growth acceleration in second-quarter profits, and companies aren’t providing reasons for revision.

    Delta Air Lines reported this month that it’s experiencing robust demand from both business and leisure travelers. PepsiCo maintained its 2026 profit outlook last week, which it originally provided before the Iran conflict began, with CEO Ramon Laguarta expressing encouragement about international business resilience. GE Vernova announced Wednesday that AI data center power demand is surging, prompting an increased annual revenue forecast.

    Naturally, American stock markets could easily reverse course. Wall Street sentiment might quickly return to fear if U.S.-Iran negotiations collapse and oil markets face potential shortages.

    Extended high oil prices would eventually erode corporate profits by increasing business costs and reducing consumer spending power for households and other customers.

  • Federal Court Upholds Ten Commandments Display Requirements in Public Schools

    Federal Court Upholds Ten Commandments Display Requirements in Public Schools

    A federal appeals court decision this week has strengthened efforts by several states to mandate Ten Commandments displays in public school classrooms, marking a significant development in the ongoing debate over religion’s place in education.

    The most extensive effort to place the Ten Commandments in every classroom started in Texas last year, where a federal appeals court on Tuesday rejected a legal challenge to the state’s requirement. Although the matter is far from resolved, the decision represents a win for conservative advocates who dismiss claims that such displays promote religion to students or infringe on parental rights, including those of non-Christian families.

    The mandate has sparked both support and opposition, energizing school board discussions and leading to official guidance for educators on how to respond to student inquiries. Several teachers have chosen to resign rather than comply with posting the Ten Commandments in their rooms.

    Southern Republican legislators have spearheaded this movement. Louisiana led the charge by becoming the first state to enact such a requirement in 2024, with Arkansas and Texas following suit.

    Alabama represents the most recent addition, where Republican Governor Kay Ivey this month approved legislation mandating Ten Commandments displays in grades 5-12 public school classrooms where American history is regularly taught, plus shared spaces including cafeterias and libraries.

    Texas Governor Greg Abbott signed his state’s measure, which mandates Ten Commandments postings in all public school classrooms and became effective in September. Since the legislation only obligates districts to display them when donated, conservative organizations and supporters began delivering boxes of posters to schools statewide as the academic year commenced.

    An Associated Press review of state legislation using bill-tracking software Plural identified at least 30 proposed measures in current legislative sessions that would mandate displaying the document in schools. Republican lawmakers introduced all these bills, with nearly every one originating in states under GOP control.

    Only a handful have received legislative committee approval. Additional bills in various states would either permit displays or mandate instruction incorporating the document.

    For several months, a lower court decision prevented approximately twelve Texas school districts from installing the posters. However, the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in New Orleans overturned that ruling in a narrow 9-8 vote, determining the requirement doesn’t violate student or parental rights.

    “No child is made to recite the Commandments, believe them, or affirm their divine origin,” the ruling says.

    The American Civil Liberties Union and other organizations that contested the Texas law representing parents expressed being “extremely disappointed” with the appeals court’s ruling.

    “The First Amendment safeguards the separation of church and state, and the freedom of families to choose how, when and if to provide their children with religious instruction,” they said in a statement. “This decision tramples those rights.”

    In February, the same appeals court authorized Louisiana to implement its own statute. Louisiana’s Republican Attorney General Liz Murrill praised the Texas case outcome, stating it “adopted our entire legal defense.”

    Texas’s Ten Commandments requirement represents just one aspect of the broader struggle over religious content in classrooms. In 2024, the state authorized optional biblical curriculum for elementary schools, and a June proposal would incorporate Bible stories into mandatory reading assignments.

    In adjacent Oklahoma, the former state education leader mandated that public schools integrate Bible content into lesson plans for grades 5-12, triggering legal action from parents and educators. Many schools simply disregarded the directive.

    Last year, Oklahoma’s Supreme Court prevented the state’s attempt to establish the nation’s first publicly funded religious charter school. The case awaits consideration by the U.S. Supreme Court.

    The ACLU and other groups challenging the Texas law indicated they plan to appeal the 5th Circuit’s decision to the U.S. Supreme Court.

  • Federal Officials Block COVID Vaccine Study from Publication

    Federal Officials Block COVID Vaccine Study from Publication

    Federal health authorities have blocked the release of research that examined whether COVID-19 vaccines were effective at preventing hospitalizations among adults.

    A spokesperson for the Department of Health and Human Services confirmed Wednesday that officials decided to prevent the study’s publication, pointing to disagreements over the research methodology used.

    The blocked research was scheduled to be published in the Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, which serves as the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s primary publication.

    Researchers typically evaluate COVID-19 vaccine effectiveness by examining patients who end up in hospitals or emergency departments. Scientists determine vaccination status and compare positive COVID-19 test rates between vaccinated and unvaccinated individuals.

    Multiple respected medical journals, including Pediatrics and the New England Journal of Medicine, have published studies using this same research approach after thorough expert review.

    The blocked study used identical methods and found that vaccines reduced emergency room visits and hospital admissions among healthy adults by approximately 50 percent during the previous winter, according to The Washington Post, which initially reported the cancellation.

    HHS officials declined to specify their exact concerns with the methodology but suggested that previous infections, patient behavior, and variations in healthcare-seeking patterns could influence outcomes.

    However, the broader scientific community doesn’t share these worries, and numerous researchers have successfully employed this approach, according to Dr. Fiona Havers, an Atlanta physician who formerly worked at the CDC. She explained that the methodology is designed to account for healthcare-seeking differences, and prior infections shouldn’t significantly impact results given widespread coronavirus exposure among Americans.

    While no research design is flawless, HHS officials haven’t suggested an alternative approach “that’s realistic and ethical for getting real-time estimates of how well vaccines are working each year,” Havers stated. She previously directed a CDC hospital surveillance network team focused on COVID-19 and other respiratory illnesses.

    Public health advocates previously expressed concerns during President Donald Trump’s initial term that political appointees were attempting to influence MMWR publications.

    These worries resurfaced after Trump’s return to office when MMWR publication was briefly halted. While it resumed, the publication has remained significantly reduced from its previous scope.

    “Health care professionals rely on the MMWR for timely, objective and fact-based information about the nation’s public health,” stated U.S. Senator Dick Durbin, an Illinois Democrat who raised concerns when CDC communications were previously suspended.

    “Muzzling scientists and doctors on how to prevent Americans from being hospitalized can have deadly consequences. The CDC must abandon plans to place a political gag order on this critical research,” Durbin said Wednesday.

  • Former VP Candidate Tim Walz Announces Book About Minnesota Immigration Crackdown

    Former VP Candidate Tim Walz Announces Book About Minnesota Immigration Crackdown

    Former Democratic vice presidential candidate Tim Walz plans to publish a book next year that draws inspiration from his state’s response to federal immigration enforcement operations and community resistance efforts in the Minneapolis-St. Paul region.

    The Minnesota governor’s upcoming book, titled ‘Good Neighbors,’ will be released by W.W. Norton & Company, the publisher announced to The Associated Press on Wednesday.

    In a statement, the 62-year-old Democrat reflected on his state’s response to the federal actions. ‘Last winter, Minnesotans from all walks of life showed up for one another with compassion, courage and resilience,’ Walz said.

    ‘Here in Minnesota, it’s simple — we call it being a good neighbor. I’ve always been fascinated by the ways in which we keep community in America, and how we interweave our lives,’ he added.

    Walz gained national recognition in 2024 when Vice President Kamala Harris selected him as her vice presidential running mate for their unsuccessful campaign against President Donald Trump and Senator JD Vance. A publisher representative would not confirm whether the book will include details about the presidential campaign, stating that no further information was available beyond the initial announcement.

    The governor had been an outspoken opponent of federal immigration enforcement operations, particularly following the deadly shootings of Renee Good and Alex Pretti in January. Minnesota has filed a lawsuit against the federal government, claiming that immigration enforcement activities caused more than $600 million in economic harm to the state.

  • RFK Jr. Defends Budget Cuts, Denies Responsibility for Measles Outbreaks

    RFK Jr. Defends Budget Cuts, Denies Responsibility for Measles Outbreaks

    Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. wrapped up an intense week of congressional testimony on Wednesday, facing tough questions about rising measles cases and defending President Trump’s proposed budget that would slash funding to his department by more than 12%.

    During multiple hearings before Senate and House committees this week and last, Kennedy found himself defending Trump’s 2027 budget proposal, which increases military spending while reducing Department of Health and Human Services funding. The cuts total more than $100 billion from his agency’s budget.

    Lawmakers from both political parties expressed alarm about reduced funding for programs and research initiatives. Kennedy admitted the reductions were “painful” but argued they were essential to tackle the federal government’s unprecedented $39 trillion deficit.

    When facing aggressive questioning from Democratic members, Kennedy grew increasingly confrontational, sometimes shouting his responses. He frequently accused Democratic lawmakers of playing politics, fabricating claims, and prioritizing media attention over substantive dialogue.

    A major point of contention centered on accountability for declining childhood immunization rates and measles outbreaks that have swept the nation in recent months, putting America’s measles-free status at risk. Kennedy consistently refused to accept blame for these developments.

    “It has nothing to do with me,” Kennedy stated Tuesday regarding the nationwide increase in measles cases over the past year. He pointed to rising measles infections globally, including in countries like Canada, Mexico and the United Kingdom.

    Kennedy, who previously campaigned against vaccines for years before entering government service and once told people to “resist” CDC vaccination schedules for children in 2021, rejected claims that he opposes vaccines. He described himself as “pro-science.”

    During the hearings, he attempted to highlight HHS programs unrelated to immunizations, reflecting the administration’s strategy to emphasize less divisive health issues such as proper nutrition.

    Kennedy maintained that declining vaccination rates stem from Americans losing confidence in government health recommendations during the COVID-19 pandemic. He claimed to be working toward rebuilding that confidence, though polling data indicates trust in federal health agencies has continued dropping during his time in office.

    Democratic Representative Kim Schrier from Washington suggested Kennedy’s vaccine positions have created a “spillover effect” leading mothers to refuse vitamin K shots typically given to newborns to prevent brain hemorrhaging.

    “I’ve never said anything about vitamin K,” Kennedy responded.

    “That’s exactly the point,” Schrier replied.

    However, Kennedy did receive praise from Republican Senator Tim Scott of South Carolina, who credited him with helping manage a serious measles outbreak in his state over the past year.

    “We would not be on the right side of this outbreak without your leadership,” Scott told Kennedy.

    Whenever Democrats mentioned nearly $1 trillion in Medicaid reductions over ten years, primarily through new work requirements for beneficiaries, Kennedy forcefully disputed characterizing these changes as cuts to Medicaid.

    “Only in Washington is it considered a cut,” Kennedy told Democratic Senator Ben Ray Luján from New Mexico on Wednesday.

    Kennedy referenced a Congressional Budget Office analysis showing Medicaid spending projected to grow approximately 47% over the coming decade. However, policy experts argue his interpretation of that data is misleading and politically motivated, noting the spending increases reflect normal factors like inflation and population growth.

    “This is an old, sort of tired argument that’s been used by conservatives to justify spending cuts by saying, well, if spending is still growing in nominal terms, somehow there wasn’t a cut,” explained Edwin Park, a research professor at Georgetown University. “The federal government is spending nearly a trillion dollars less than it otherwise would have in the absence of the legislation.”

    Healthcare affordability emerged as a significant concern, particularly with the 2026 midterm elections approaching. Lawmakers from both parties raised questions about soaring medical and insurance costs.

    On Tuesday, Republican Representative Cliff Bentz from Oregon shared his brother’s situation, paying $26,000 annually for health coverage.

    “What in the world can I go back to him and say? ‘Hey, the administration is working on trying to drive these prices down?’” Bentz asked Kennedy.

    Kennedy highlighted several Trump administration efforts to reduce costs, including the White House’s TrumpRx website offering discounted medications and Trump’s negotiated deals with pharmaceutical companies for favorable pricing.

    When senators pressed for details about these agreements, Kennedy promised to share information that wouldn’t compromise proprietary data or trade secrets. Some Democrats demanded more aggressive action.

    “Why don’t you do an agreement yourself?” he challenged Democratic Senator Ron Wyden from Oregon. “You’ve had power to do that for 20 years and haven’t done it.”

    To achieve the proposed 12% reduction in HHS’s budget exceeding $100 billion, the Trump administration plans to eliminate approximately $5 billion from the National Institutes of Health while cutting numerous other programs, including assistance for low-income households’ energy costs.

    Multiple senators questioned Kennedy about the rationale behind various cuts. The NIH reductions particularly sparked bipartisan criticism.

    “There’s an argument to be made that we’re handing China our lunch,” said Republican Senator Thom Tillis from North Carolina.

    Kennedy acknowledged that neither he nor his agency staff supported the cuts, describing them as “painful.”

    “There’s a lot of cuts to the agency that nobody wants,” he admitted.

  • Pike Creek Road Construction Causes Lane Restrictions Through Afternoon

    Pike Creek Road Construction Causes Lane Restrictions Through Afternoon

    Motorists traveling through the Pike Creek area are experiencing traffic delays today due to ongoing construction activities.

    Delaware Department of Transportation reports that Upper Pike Creek Road at its intersection with New Linden Hill Road is experiencing periodic lane restrictions as crews perform construction work.

    The lane closures began earlier today and are expected to remain in effect until 4:30 PM this afternoon. Drivers should plan for possible delays and consider alternate routes if traveling through the area.

    DelDOT advises motorists to exercise caution when driving through the construction zone and to expect intermittent traffic pattern changes throughout the day.

  • Decade-Old New Castle Murder Remains Unsolved, Police Seek Tips

    Decade-Old New Castle Murder Remains Unsolved, Police Seek Tips

    A fatal shooting that claimed the life of a 41-year-old man at a New Castle mobile home community nearly a decade ago continues to puzzle investigators.

    Manuel Ramirez was killed on April 22, 2014, when police were called to respond to gunfire at the Mobile Home Village Trailer Park on New Castle Avenue around 7:09 in the evening.

    The incident occurred at 3115 New Castle Avenue in New Castle, Delaware, within the trailer park community. Despite years of investigation, authorities have yet to identify the person responsible for Ramirez’s death.

    The case represents one of several unsolved homicides that law enforcement continues to actively pursue, hoping that new information or witnesses may eventually come forward to help bring closure to the victim’s family.

  • Pentagon Rushes to Boost Small Drone Production as Warfare Evolves

    Pentagon Rushes to Boost Small Drone Production as Warfare Evolves

    The U.S. Department of Defense is launching a significant effort to accelerate domestic production of compact attack drones as these affordable unmanned aircraft revolutionize modern military operations.

    These small-scale attack drones have emerged as crucial weapons in contemporary conflicts, prompting military leaders to prioritize rapid expansion of manufacturing capabilities for these increasingly vital battlefield tools.

  • UD Rowing Coach Asiya Mahmud Selected to Lead U-23 National Team

    UD Rowing Coach Asiya Mahmud Selected to Lead U-23 National Team

    The University of Delaware’s rowing program has received national recognition as head coach Asiya Mahmud was selected to lead the Women’s 8+ squad for the upcoming 2026 U-23 World Rowing Championships.

    Mahmud will also serve as head coach for the same team during this summer’s World University Games, marking a significant achievement for both the coach and the Blue Hens rowing program.

    The appointment highlights the strength and reputation of Delaware’s rowing program under Mahmud’s leadership, as she prepares to guide some of the nation’s top young rowers on the international stage.

  • UD Freshman Lacrosse Player Scott Conte Receives National Weekly Honor Again

    UD Freshman Lacrosse Player Scott Conte Receives National Weekly Honor Again

    A University of Delaware freshman lacrosse player has received national recognition for his outstanding play on the field for the second time this season.

    Scott Conte, who plays for the Blue Hens men’s lacrosse team, was selected for the USILA Division I Team of the Week following his impressive showing in the team’s matchup with St. Bonaventure. The United States Intercollegiate Lacrosse Association made the announcement on Wednesday.

    This marks the second occasion this year that the first-year player has received this prestigious weekly recognition from the national organization.

  • Religious Group Takes Church Political Speech Case to Federal Appeals Court

    Religious Group Takes Church Political Speech Case to Federal Appeals Court

    A Christian broadcasting organization is taking their fight over church political speech restrictions to a federal appeals court after a Texas judge dismissed their initial lawsuit.

    Michael Farris, General Counsel for the National Religious Broadcasters (NRB) and lead attorney in the NRB v. Bessent case, announced the formal appeal has been submitted to the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals. The original lawsuit was thrown out on March 31 by the District Court for the Eastern District of Texas due to jurisdictional issues under the Anti-Injunction Act.

    At the heart of the dispute is the Johnson Amendment, a federal law that prohibits churches and other tax-exempt organizations from publicly supporting or opposing political candidates.

    Farris argues that religious organizations should be able to contest speech limitations without first breaking the law. “The Supreme Court has made it clear that no one has to violate a law in order to challenge its limitation on the freedom of speech or religion. The Anti-Injunction Act cannot be construed to force churches to violate the Johnson Amendment in order to challenge its chilling effect on their First Amendment freedoms,” he stated.

    The NRB claims in their lawsuit that the Johnson Amendment is applied unevenly, suggesting conservative religious institutions face punishment while liberal churches and nonprofits receive more lenient treatment regarding political involvement.

    The Johnson Amendment has remained a contentious issue in legal and political circles, creating ongoing debates about where to draw lines between religious freedom, free speech, and electoral activities for tax-exempt organizations.

    The NRB describes itself as a nonpartisan international group representing Christian media professionals who reach millions through various platforms. The organization works to defend free speech protections while maintaining professional standards among its membership.

    According to the NRB, the appeals process is expected to extend over several months as the case works its way through the federal court system.

  • Israel Celebrates 78th Independence Day as Population Reaches 10.244 Million

    Israel Celebrates 78th Independence Day as Population Reaches 10.244 Million

    As Israel commemorates its 78th Independence Day, new demographic data reveals the nation’s population has reached 10.244 million people, the Central Bureau of Statistics announced Sunday.

    Since its founding in 1948 with roughly 806,000 residents, the country has witnessed remarkable growth, expanding by more than 12.5 times its original size. Immigration has played a major role in this expansion, with over 3.5 million newcomers settling in Israel throughout its history. Nearly half of these immigrants—approximately 1.68 million people representing 47.8%—have arrived since 1990.

    The statistics show that Israel now houses roughly 45% of the global Jewish population, with about 81% of the country’s Jewish residents being born within its borders.

    This past year brought significant demographic shifts, including approximately 177,000 newborns and around 21,000 new immigrants. During the same period, about 48,000 deaths were recorded, while an estimated 45,000 Israelis remained living overseas.

    The annual population increase totaled roughly 146,000 people, marking a 1.4% growth rate. This expansion encompasses about 110,000 new Israeli citizens plus 36,000 foreign residents.

    Breaking down the current population by demographics: Jewish residents and others categorized as non-Jewish, non-Arab citizens comprise 7.790 million people, representing 76% of the total. Arab citizens number 2.157 million, making up 21.1% of the population, while 296,000 residents classified as foreigners account for 2.9%.

    Compared to many Western nations, Israel maintains a relatively youthful population structure. Residents between ages 0 and 14 represent approximately 27% of the population, while those 65 and older make up 13% of all residents.

  • Israeli Soldier Punished After Damaging Christian Cross in Lebanese Village

    Israeli Soldier Punished After Damaging Christian Cross in Lebanese Village

    An incident involving an Israeli soldier vandalizing a Christian cross in a Lebanese border village has sparked widespread anger and prompted swift military punishment.

    The soldier was photographed damaging the religious symbol in Debel, a Christian-majority village in southern Lebanon’s Bint Jbeil district. The image circulated widely on social media, intensifying tensions in a region already struggling with the aftermath of recent conflict between Israel and Hezbollah.

    Israeli military officials acted quickly to address the controversy. Two soldiers received 30-day military detention sentences – one for destroying the crucifix and another for taking the photograph. Six additional soldiers present during the incident were brought in for questioning for failing to intervene.

    Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu expressed shock at the soldier’s actions and promised strict disciplinary action. Foreign Minister Gideon Sa’ar issued an apology to Christians offended by the incident, while military leaders stated the behavior went against fundamental army principles.

    The Assembly of Catholic Ordinaries of the Holy Land strongly denounced the act, describing it as “a grave affront to the Christian faith.” Their statement continued: “It further reveals a disturbing failure in moral and human formation, wherein even the most elementary reverence for the sacred and for the dignity of others has been gravely compromised.”

    Israeli authorities coordinated with local residents to replace the damaged cross, and reports indicated a new statue was installed shortly after the incident.

    Bishop Dennis Nthumbi of the Israel Allies Foundation condemned the destruction while urging restraint in response. “What we are witnessing in that image can only be described as desecration—the violation of something held sacred. Such acts, even when carried out by an individual, strike deeply at the heart of faith and reverence,” he stated.

    However, he cautioned against using the incident to damage interfaith relations. “At the same time, we must speak with clarity and restraint. There is a growing wave of propaganda that seeks to frame the Jewish people as hostile to Christians. Incidents like this—though isolated and not reflective of a people or a covenant—can unfortunately be used to reinforce those false narratives,” he explained.

    “Let it be stated without ambiguity: the Jewish and the Christian people are not enemies; we are spiritually connected, rooted in a shared heritage and revelation. We must not allow singular actions to fracture what God Himself has woven together,” he added.

    Former Israeli government spokesman Eylon Levy called for harsh consequences, telling reporters the incident represented “atrocious behavior” and declaring “This is not who we are.”

    “This abominable act is not only a moral outrage; it was also seized by bad faith actors to intensify a campaign to divide Christians, and by extension America and the West, from Israel,” he said.

    “This soldier has caused incalculable damage and must be punished with the harshest possible penalty, not only for an act of vandalism but for bringing the whole State of Israel into disrepute,” he continued.

    Local residents in Debel say the cross incident represents just one element of their ongoing hardships. Eli, a youth activist from the village, described the broader challenges facing his community.

    “Speaking as someone from Debel, what people here are going through is not just about one incident or one moment it’s a continuation of a very difficult situation that has been unfolding for a while,” he explained.

    “From the ground, the village has been living under very heavy pressure,” he said, describing Debel as “a small civilian community of Christian families” facing severe restrictions on daily activities.

    “The road linking Debel to Rmeish—which is the main access route for food, medicine, and basic needs has become extremely dangerous. Two Christian civilians have been killed on this road, which has deepened fear,” he noted.

    The activist reported extensive property damage throughout the area. “At the same time, the outskirts of the village have seen repeated destruction. Infrastructure being damaged, land being bulldozed, and homes being hit or destroyed,” he said.

    “More than 20 houses are said to be completely destroyed, and many others heavily damaged. These are civilian homes—places where families lived for generations, and their loss is felt very directly inside the community,” he added.

    “When the incident of the statue of Jesus happened, it didn’t come in isolation. For people here, it was added onto an already existing feeling of pressure and vulnerability,” he explained.

    “The reaction locally was not one single emotion, but more a quiet mix of sadness, exhaustion, and concern about how far things are escalating in daily life,” he said.

    The United Nations peacekeeping force in Lebanon helped coordinate the cross replacement. “UNIFIL’s Italian contingent, through Father Claudio, expressed sorrow over the destruction of a crucifix in DEBEL and confirmed coordination with UNIFIL leadership to restore it, with a new cross statue expected within 48 hours,” Eli reported.

    The controversy highlights how individual actions during wartime can have far-reaching diplomatic and religious consequences. While Israeli officials moved quickly to condemn the incident and punish those involved, the image has already become part of the complex narrative surrounding the fragile ceasefire between Israel and Hezbollah.

  • Syrian Leader Reopens Basketball Arena After 14-Year War

    Syrian Leader Reopens Basketball Arena After 14-Year War

    Damascus celebrated a significant milestone yesterday as Al-Fayhaa Sports Hall reopened its doors following extensive renovations, with Syrian President Ahmed al-Sharaa joining thousands of fans for the arena’s first major event in years. The ceremony represented a symbolic step toward normalcy for a nation emerging from 14 years of devastating conflict.

    The reopening festivities included cultural performances showcasing Syrian heritage and concluded with a friendly basketball game between Syria and Lebanon’s national teams. Enthusiastic crowds packed the stands that had remained empty throughout the prolonged war years, creating an atmosphere of celebration and hope.

    High-ranking officials joined al-Sharaa for the occasion, including Foreign Minister Asaad Al-Shaibani, Interior Minister Anas Khattab, Sports Minister Mohammad Alhamid, and Syrian Basketball Federation President Rami Issa. Lebanese basketball dignitaries also attended, notably Federation President Akram Halabi and Hekmeh Club President Ragheb Haddad.

    The comprehensive renovation project carried a price tag of approximately $3 million as part of the Ministry of Sports and Youth’s broader investment strategy. Upgrades encompassed new court flooring, enhanced lighting and climate control systems, refurbished seating areas, and state-of-the-art digital technology including modern screens and audio equipment. Premium hospitality areas were also added to accommodate future local and international competitions.

    President al-Sharaa displayed obvious enthusiasm while watching the basketball match, revealing his personal connection to the sport during pre-game comments. He explained that while basketball has always interested him, the years of military conflict and national turmoil prevented him from following it closely. The current period, he noted, presents an opportunity to revitalize sports interest not merely for entertainment, but as a vital component of societal reconstruction and regional engagement.

    Speaking before the match began, al-Sharaa committed to continuing infrastructure improvements across the country’s sports facilities. He emphasized that the Ministry of Sports and Youth, working alongside local federations, is implementing a comprehensive strategy to revive the athletic sector while highlighting sports’ potential for attracting investment and boosting economic recovery.

    The strong official attendance and robust public participation served as important indicators of the event’s significance within Syria’s sports community. Spectators and athletic observers shared varied perspectives on Al-Fayhaa Hall’s return to operation, with many praising the renovation efforts while others voiced optimism for broader sector development. Numerous attendees recognized the event’s implications extending beyond athletics into wider social and economic spheres.

    Syrian photojournalist Omar Albam shared his observations with The Media Line: “I am very happy to see the stands of this hall filled with fans. It is an extraordinary event in a country emerging from a long war that lasted 14 years.”

    Albam observed that Syrians demonstrate nearly equal passion for basketball as they do for soccer, particularly during matches against Lebanese opponents. “Although they defeated the Syrian national team 110-74, the joy that filled the stands was very great,” Albam noted.

    Spectator Sawsan Al-Shami expressed satisfaction with the event, particularly appreciating the hall’s world-class renovations that now compete with international venues. She told The Media Line that Syrians had grown unaccustomed to such gatherings since the previous Assad government concentrated exclusively on warfare rather than public amenities.

    Ahmad Al-Sayyid, a young attendee from Idlib, conveyed pride in his nation’s progress, telling The Media Line that the substantial crowd demonstrates Syrians’ eagerness to embrace a renewed life filled with activity and productivity.

    The celebration also sparked broader conversations about Syria’s athletic landscape during recent years, particularly under Bashar Assad’s rule, when sports infrastructure suffered severe damage from conflict and many facilities faced destruction or abandonment.

    Human rights organizations and media investigations have documented instances where sports venues were repurposed for non-athletic uses, including conversion into detention facilities, generating widespread condemnation and raising serious concerns about public space management.

    Al-Fayhaa Hall’s restoration represents part of a larger reconstruction effort aimed at restoring normal life patterns. Government agencies are prioritizing the reactivation of service and sports sectors as recovery indicators, with athletics serving as a symbolically significant tool for rebuilding community connections and strengthening stability perceptions.

    Basketball originated in 1891 through James Naismith, a Canadian physical education instructor working in Massachusetts. He created the game as indoor winter exercise for students, utilizing a ball and peach baskets as scoring targets.

    Syrian basketball history traces back to the early 1900s, initially appearing in educational institutions like Damascus’s Laïque School before expanding to other schools including the Italian School and Scientific College, establishing the sport’s foundation within the country.

    During the 1920s, the game developed more structured organization through competitions between local and Lebanese teams, elevating technical standards and strengthening its presence. The 1930s and 1940s witnessed significant basketball expansion as sports clubs like Barada Club adopted it, achieving remarkable victories including wins against French military teams, demonstrating local development progress.

    The sport spread throughout secondary schools during this era, becoming part of organized athletics with inter-team tournaments before expanding beyond educational settings into public venues, spawning new clubs including Al-Ahli, Al-Ghouta, and Al-Fityan. The Syrian Basketball Federation’s 1948 establishment ushered in official organization featuring unified tournaments and oversight. Syria began international competition participation, including a 1949 Cairo tournament, marking its global debut.

    Foreign coach recruitment in the late 1950s introduced modern training methodologies, reflected in improved Syrian team technical performance, cementing basketball’s status among the nation’s premier team sports.

    The Syrian Basketball League launched in 1956 alongside the Basketball Federation’s creation. Al-Shabiba (now Al-Jalaa) captured the inaugural 1956-57 season championship and maintained dominance until the 1978-79 season, when Al-Ahli Aleppo ended Al-Shabiba’s reign and secured its first title in 1979-80. Al-Jalaa holds the Syrian Basketball League record with 29 championships, followed by Al-Ahli Aleppo’s 18 titles—both Aleppo-based—and Damascus’s Al-Wahda with 11.

    The Syrian Arab Basketball Federation serves as basketball’s governing authority in Syria, directly overseeing national teams like the Syrian national basketball squad and domestic clubs competing in the Syrian Basketball League. It joined both the Asian Basketball Federation and International Basketball Federation in 1948, establishing it among the region’s oldest basketball organizations.

    Al-Fayhaa Hall’s inauguration marks a positive advancement for Syrian athletics, demonstrating commitment toward rebuilding war-damaged infrastructure. Simultaneously, it underscores broader sector challenges while raising questions about Syrian sports’ future, balancing recovery initiatives with necessary reform measures.

  • US-Led Talks Thursday Amid Ongoing Israel-Lebanon Border Violence

    US-Led Talks Thursday Amid Ongoing Israel-Lebanon Border Violence

    Diplomatic efforts to ease tensions between Israel and Lebanon will take center stage Thursday as Washington hosts crucial negotiations, even as military confrontations persist between the neighboring nations, according to US government sources.

    The scheduled diplomatic meeting comes despite ongoing hostilities, with Hezbollah launching multiple rocket attacks Tuesday targeting Israeli forces positioned in southern Lebanon and sending a drone toward Israeli territory, Israeli military officials reported. The militant group took credit for these operations, stating they were retaliation for what Hezbollah characterized as Israeli breaches of existing ceasefire agreements.

    Israeli forces responded with airstrikes targeting areas near al-Jbour in Lebanon’s western Beqaa Valley region. Lebanese news outlets confirmed that the Israeli military action resulted in one fatality and left two individuals wounded.

    The American negotiating team will be headed by Secretary of State Marco Rubio, joined by senior adviser Mike Needham and US Ambassador to Lebanon Michel Issa. US Ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee will participate in the discussions as well, with State Department officials describing his involvement as part of standard “routine consultations.”

    Israeli representation will come through Ambassador Yechiel Leiter, while Lebanon’s diplomatic mission will be guided by Ambassador Nada Hamadeh, continuing the pattern of senior-level participation from earlier diplomatic efforts.

    These Washington negotiations are moving forward despite the ongoing military confrontations between both nations, underscoring the significant obstacles facing diplomatic initiatives aimed at bringing stability to the volatile Israel-Lebanon border region.

  • Colorado Avalanche Lead Kings 2-0 Despite Offensive Struggles in Playoffs

    Colorado Avalanche Lead Kings 2-0 Despite Offensive Struggles in Playoffs

    DENVER (AP) — Star player Nathan MacKinnon and his Colorado Avalanche teammates have legitimate reasons to feel constrained. Their trademark speed and explosive scoring ability haven’t been fully unleashed during this playoff run.

    The league’s most prolific offensive squad and quickest team during the regular season continues to struggle against Los Angeles Kings’ defensive system that clogs the neutral zone. Colorado’s top five regular season point leaders remain without a goal in the series.

    However, the Avalanche maintain a commanding 2-0 advantage in their opening round matchup as they travel to Los Angeles for Thursday’s Game 3. Both victories came by identical 2-1 scores, including one overtime victory, demonstrating their versatility in different game situations.

    “You definitely can get frustrated during the regular season, but playoffs … there’s no time for that,” said MacKinnon, who has an assist through two games after leading the league with 53 goals in the regular season. “You’ve got to be 100% in, team-player positive, and you’ve just got to stick with it. I feel like we’re doing a lot of good things and we’re up to it. It’s low-scoring games, but it’s not about the amount of goals. Just got to get some wins.”

    During the regular season, Colorado topped the NHL in offensive categories including goals per game (3.63), shots per game (33.7) and even-strength scoring. The Presidents’ Trophy recipients also surrendered the fewest goals, with goaltender Scott Wedgewood currently handling starting duties.

    “We’re comfortable playing these games,” said captain Gabriel Landeskog, who tied Tuesday’s game with 3:35 left in regulation. “If you get a little impatient with it, you start forcing plays. We just kind of kept it going. Kept trusting our forecheck, and finally, we ended up getting rewarded for it.”

    While trailing in the series, the Kings remain confident in their approach. This grinding, defense-first style of hockey suits their identity perfectly, particularly with Anton Forsberg between the pipes. He’s turned away 64 of 68 shots across the first two contests.

    “We’re playing a brand of hockey that gives us a chance to win,” said Kings interim coach D.J. Smith, who was showered by shattered glass on the bench in the second period Tuesday after fans pushed the panel in celebration. “Hockey’s so close and night-to-night, you win by a goal, lose by a goal. We’ve done that all year.”

    “We haven’t maybe had some bounces but that’s the kind of game you can win with,” he said. “That’s a testament to the guys and how they’re digging in. Now maybe just have a little more confidence at home with the puck, but you can’t forget the style of play that we’re playing.”

    Los Angeles has successfully neutralized Colorado’s power play opportunities, holding the Avalanche scoreless on seven man-advantage chances. Special teams have been a source of concern for Colorado throughout the season.

    “It may look real simple — it’s no different than what they’re doing — but you’ve got to repeat certain things enough so your odds go up at putting one in the back of the net,” Avalanche coach Jared Bednar said. “I still think we’ve got another step in our game that we can ramp up to. So we’ve just got to go out and try to better our performances at home and now on the road.”

    Colorado has demonstrated defensive commitment by recording the second-highest blocked shot total in the playoffs through Tuesday. They’ve also generated significant offensive pressure, ranking second in total shot attempts.

    “We know we can play different styles,” said Wedgewood, who’s stopped 48 of 50 shots. “It’s going to be tough going to (their) building. They’re going to have their crowd and their emotions. Go in there and do the same thing, hopefully, take another one or two, and end it or come back here and do it again.”

  • Two Top Peru Officials Quit Over Delayed $3.5B U.S. Fighter Jet Purchase

    Two Top Peru Officials Quit Over Delayed $3.5B U.S. Fighter Jet Purchase

    LIMA, Peru — Two cabinet members in Peru submitted their resignations Wednesday after the nation’s temporary president decided to postpone a massive $3.5 billion military aircraft purchase from the United States until after June’s presidential election.

    Interim President José María Balcázar announced last week that he would leave the decision about acquiring 24 F-16 fighter jets from Lockheed Martin to whoever wins the upcoming presidential runoff, citing concerns about his authority as a temporary leader.

    “For us to commit such a large sum of money to the incoming government would be a poor practice for a transitional government,” Balcázar said at the time.

    The delay prompted a sharp response from U.S. Ambassador Bernie Navarro, who warned on social media that he would take unspecified action if Peru “negotiates in bad faith” or undermines American interests.

    Defense Minister Carlos Díaz and Foreign Minister Hugo de Zela both left their positions Wednesday over the dispute. According to documents obtained by The Associated Press, Díaz wrote in his resignation that delaying the aircraft purchase “could compromise” Peru’s national interests.

    During a press conference, both departing ministers revealed they had attempted without success to convince Balcázar to proceed with the agreement. Díaz disclosed that defense officials went ahead and signed the contract Monday despite the president’s objections, following the terms outlined in the deal.

    In a radio interview, de Zela criticized Balcázar for providing misleading information to the public regarding the contract details. Díaz explained that many specifics about the agreement cannot be shared due to their classified status.

    The aircraft deal was initially announced in 2024 under former President Dina Boluarte’s administration, with plans to finance the purchase through domestic borrowing — $2 billion in 2025 and $1.5 billion in 2026. Besides Lockheed Martin, Sweden’s Saab and France’s Dassault Aviation also submitted proposals for the contract.

    Peru’s legislature selected Balcázar as the country’s eighth president in ten years this past February, replacing another temporary leader who was removed over corruption charges after serving just four months.

    The South American nation will hold its presidential runoff election on June 7, though vote counting continues as officials process ballots from distant regions and Peruvian diplomatic posts overseas following the initial voting round on April 12.

  • Fellow Marathoners Carry Struggling Runners to Boston Finish Line

    Fellow Marathoners Carry Struggling Runners to Boston Finish Line

    BOSTON (AP) — During Monday’s Boston Marathon, runner Ajay Haridasse collapsed near the finish line when his body gave out. Two fellow competitors, Robson De Oliveira from Brazil and Aaron Beggs from Britain, stopped their own races to lift Haridasse and carry him approximately 1,000 feet to complete the course.

    The inspiring moments occurred as thousands of other participants continued past the struggling runner. Instead of focusing solely on their own finish times, De Oliveira and Beggs hoisted Haridasse onto their shoulders and helped him reach the end of the prestigious race.

    Spectator Pete Grasso captured the remarkable act of kindness on video as the two runners assisted Haridasse.

    “The coolest part about this moment was that these two guys were less than a tenth of a mile away, in the middle of a really, really fast race, and still stopped to help a fellow runner who needed some help. That’s not easy to do,” Grasso said in an email interview. “Seeing them put everything aside in that moment just to get another runner across the line was incredible. And hearing the crowd respond, cheering for them, supporting them, truly gave me chills.”

    Another touching display occurred when Washington, D.C. runner Lan Nguyen faced difficulty reaching the finish. Three other participants — Jessica Kier from Snohomish, Washington, Meredith Rosenberg from Boston, and William Bara-Jimenez from Bethesda, Maryland — stepped in to assist her. The group carried Nguyen for portions of the final stretch before she crawled across the finish line herself.

    The Boston Athletic Association, which organizes the marathon, released a statement praising how participants supported struggling competitors at “the most historic finish line in all of road racing on Boylston Street.”

    “The uplifting spirit of the running community to help one another, especially in times of need, is on full display on Patriots’ Day — not just at the finish, but all along the race route,” the organization stated. Officials reported that 29,101 of the 29,470 registered participants completed the race.

  • Kennedy Center Set to Close for Major Two-Year Renovation Starting July

    Kennedy Center Set to Close for Major Two-Year Renovation Starting July

    WASHINGTON — The Kennedy Center is gearing up for an extensive two-year closure starting this July as the iconic performing arts venue tackles widespread structural problems that have plagued the building for years.

    President Donald Trump has described the facility as “tired, broken, and dilapidated” and requiring immediate attention. Meanwhile, performers including Jane Fonda and Billy Porter view the venue as a focal point for demonstrations against the current administration’s influence over cultural organizations.

    Matt Floca, who serves as the Kennedy Center’s newly appointed executive director and chief operating officer, recently led members of the media on a comprehensive walkthrough of the facility. The tour included stops at the outdoor terrace with views of the Potomac River, parking structures, loading areas, electrical systems, and the Opera House performance space.

    Throughout the inspection, one issue became consistently clear: significant water damage has affected nearly every section of the building. Evidence includes visible staining and standing water in various locations. Critical infrastructure, including multiple 800-ton cooling units that regulate the building’s temperature, has reached the end of its operational life after decades of use.

    The sheer scale of the structure — encompassing over 1.5 million square feet — means comprehensive repairs will take considerable time to complete. Specifically, two full years.

    Congressional funding of approximately $257 million will cover the renovation costs, with additional private contributions expected to support upgrades to premium spaces like exclusive member lounges.

    This extensive renovation places the Kennedy Center among other prominent Washington landmarks that have undergone major restoration projects. The Smithsonian Castle has remained closed for repairs since 2023, while the Washington Monument required scaffolding from 1998 to 2001 and again in 2013 and 2014 following earthquake repairs.

    However, no previous renovation has involved such direct presidential oversight. Trump has taken an unusually active role in the Kennedy Center’s operations during his second administration, removing former leadership and installing a personally selected board that designated him as chairman. His name now appears alongside John F. Kennedy’s on the building’s exterior.

    Trump is simultaneously pursuing other ambitious construction projects, including a ballroom addition to the former East Wing of the White House and a proposed triumphal arch near Arlington Cemetery.

    “It’s a public building, and I completely acknowledge that, but the president is really great at this, and I think his input is invaluable,” Floca stated. “He’s in the details, and it’s amazing. I really respect the input he’s given.”

    The president’s increased involvement has coincided with numerous artists distancing themselves from the institution, raising questions about whether declining ticket sales may have influenced the closure decision. The Kennedy Center has not made attendance figures public.

    The facility tour represents an opportunity for institutional renewal following more than twelve months of upheaval. Similar presentations have been provided to bipartisan congressional delegations and staff, representatives from Washington Mayor Muriel Bowser’s office, and various corporate and individual supporters.

    Construction scaffolding will surround the building during renovations, though the work won’t be so extensive that the structure’s interior becomes visible from outside. This clarification addresses Trump’s previous suggestions that supporting steel might become “fully exposed” during the process.

    The extent of visible changes for future visitors remains uncertain. Most structural work, scheduled for the renovation’s initial year, will occur in non-public areas of the building.

    Public spaces, including the Opera House’s distinctive red color scheme, will largely remain unchanged aside from modest updates. Current plans do not include modifications to the presidential viewing boxes.

    Existing Kennedy quotations will remain displayed throughout the building, and the renowned bust of the former president positioned outside the Opera House will return to its location when the facility reopens.

    “I can’t think of any JFK changes,” Floca confirmed.

    Whether additional Trump commemorations will be added alongside Kennedy tributes remains undetermined, particularly given that his presidency will be nearing its conclusion when the building becomes accessible to the public again.

  • Stock Market Bounces Back on Iran Ceasefire News and Strong Corporate Earnings

    Stock Market Bounces Back on Iran Ceasefire News and Strong Corporate Earnings

    Stock markets rebounded Wednesday, ending a two-day decline for major indexes after President Donald Trump announced an indefinite extension of the Iran ceasefire, though questions persist about lasting peace negotiations.

    The ceasefire extension came at the request of Pakistani intermediaries, Trump stated. Despite this development, the U.S. Navy continues its blockade of Iranian ports while Iran has captured two vessels in the strategically important Strait of Hormuz.

    The waterway carries approximately 20% of the world’s oil supply, making its status a critical concern for investors and a key issue in ongoing negotiations. Iran’s parliament speaker and chief negotiator, Mohammad Baqer Qalibaf, indicated that a comprehensive ceasefire would only be meaningful if the blockade ends.

    Markets have surged in recent weeks on hopes for a potential peace agreement, with the Nasdaq breaking a 13-session winning streak on Monday.

    “Everyone’s kind of sick of it… clearly, the market is looking for a beneficial outcome or some kind of decent outcome here,” commented Stephen Massocca, senior vice president at Wedbush Securities in San Francisco.

    “Earnings have been good – now, will they continue to be good if we continue to be at war – it’s going to lose a little bit of its oomph. That said, in my world, there’s still tremendous value, there’s a lot of really cheap stuff out there.”

    Market performance showed the S&P 500 climbing 73.78 points, or 1.03%, closing at 7,137.12, while the Nasdaq jumped 393.55 points, or 1.62%, finishing at 24,653.52. The Dow Jones gained 333.42 points, or 0.68%, reaching 49,482.80.

    Corporate earnings for the first quarter are currently showing growth of approximately 14%, based on LSEG data.

    Inflation concerns persist as oil prices remain close to $100 per barrel with potential for further increases.

    Technology stocks led the market rally, with the S&P 500 tech sector advancing roughly 2% to become the top performer among the 11 major sectors. Semiconductor companies drove much of the gains, including Micron Technology, which reached a new all-time high.

    The Philadelphia Semiconductor Index achieved an intraday record for the 11th consecutive session and extended its winning streak to 16 days – the longest in its history.

    Seagate’s stock price increased following Barclays’ upgrade of the data storage company to “overweight” status.

    Strong quarterly results have helped calm worries about consumer spending power despite higher energy costs from the Iran conflict.

    Goldman Sachs data shows S&P 500 earnings per share projections for 2026 and 2027 have increased by 4% since late January.

    GE Vernova led the S&P 500 after the power equipment manufacturer increased its yearly revenue outlook. Boston Scientific shares also surged following better-than-expected first-quarter performance.

    Boeing stock gained ground after reporting a quarterly loss smaller than analysts predicted, providing significant support to the Dow.

    United Airlines faced headwinds after projecting second-quarter and full-year earnings below Wall Street expectations as elevated jet fuel costs pressure profit margins and create uncertainty for the near future.

    Several major companies including Tesla, Texas Instruments, and Southwest Airlines are scheduled to release earnings after market close.

    Spirit Airlines shares more than doubled in over-the-counter trading following a Wall Street Journal report suggesting the Trump administration is nearing an agreement to assist the struggling budget airline.

  • Market Street in Greenwood to See Lane Closures for Railroad Work This Week

    Market Street in Greenwood to See Lane Closures for Railroad Work This Week

    Drivers traveling through Greenwood should expect periodic traffic disruptions on Market Street this week as railroad crews conduct essential maintenance operations.

    DelDOT officials report that Delmarva Central Railroad Company workers will begin repair activities at the railroad crossing on Market Street starting at 7:00 am this Monday, April 27, 2026. The maintenance project will cause periodic lane restrictions at the crossing location throughout the work period.

    Transportation officials expect the railroad maintenance activities to wrap up by 5:00 pm on Friday, May 1, 2026. Motorists are advised to plan for possible delays and consider alternate routes during the construction period.

  • Maryland Anglers Find Great Spring Fishing Across Chesapeake Bay Waters

    Maryland Anglers Find Great Spring Fishing Across Chesapeake Bay Waters

    Spring fishing conditions across Maryland’s Chesapeake Bay region are providing excellent opportunities for anglers this week, with water temperatures stabilizing around 60 degrees and multiple species actively feeding.

    As Earth Day and Arbor Day arrive this month, fishing enthusiasts are encouraged to reflect on conservation efforts while enjoying outdoor opportunities. Anglers can contribute by picking up discarded fishing line and trash during their trips.

    Current Conditions Through April 28

    Buoy data shows main Bay surface temperatures and river mouth areas maintaining 60-degree readings. Smaller waterways are also holding in the 60s, though protected coves and downwind areas on sunny days often reach the upper 60s – perfect conditions for hickory shad, which prefer the 55-65 degree range during their spawning period over the next two weeks.

    Most Maryland rivers and streams are experiencing below-normal flow levels. Water clarity remains typical across most Bay areas and tributaries, though algal blooms are reducing visibility along the western shore from Bush River down to the Patapsco, and near the Chester River mouth on the Eastern Shore.

    Tuesday will bring stronger tidal movements due to the approaching full moon on May 1.

    Upper Chesapeake Bay Action

    Low flows in the Susquehanna River are actually benefiting anglers this week, creating clearer and warmer conditions due to reduced dam releases. While the area above a line from Abby Point to Worton Point remains closed for striped bass catch-and-release, other species are providing plenty of action.

    Hickory shad are being caught throughout the Susquehanna up to Conowingo Dam, at Deer Creek’s mouth, and in Octoraro Creek. Small flashy spoons in gold and silver, colorful shad darts, and bright sinking flies are proving effective.

    Small male white perch are beginning to enter the Susquehanna, with numbers expected to increase over the next week before larger females arrive. The developing grass beds on Susquehanna Flats are attracting largemouth bass and Chesapeake Channa near their edges.

    Blue catfish and flathead catfish fishing remains strong near the dam, with blue cats also found near river mouths including the Susquehanna, Elk, Chester, and Gunpowder. Elevated salinity levels due to lack of rainfall make river mouths particularly promising for large blue catfish. Cut bait including gizzard shad, menhaden, or white perch works well, as do chicken liver and scented baits.

    Anglers targeting blue catfish from Sandy Point State Park beach should wear knee boots and use circle hooks to properly release any accidentally caught striped bass without compromising their protective slime layer.

    Catch-and-release striped bass opportunities exist along main channel edges for trolling large bucktails and sassy shad lures, or jigging when fish appear on depth finders. River mouths, Love Point rocks, and Bay Bridge piers are productive spots for casting paddletails and soft plastic jigs.

    Middle Bay Report

    Large post-spawn striped bass are leaving the Choptank River in increasing numbers this week. Upper Choptank temperatures peaked at 68 degrees last week before cooling slightly, while main Bay waters hold at 60 degrees. Spawning activity concluded last Saturday, with those fish now moving toward middle and lower Bay regions.

    Trolling along main channel edges remains popular, but shallower waters shouldn’t be overlooked. Chartreuse bucktails with sassy shads and 6-inch soft plastic jigs are favorites when fish are visible on electronics. Schools of menhaden often indicate nearby striped bass.

    Beginning May 1, anglers will be able to keep striped bass measuring 19-24 inches in areas below the Brewerton Channel south to Virginia waters, excluding tidal rivers.

    White perch are moving down from spawning areas and spreading to summer habitats around tidal rivers and creeks. They’re typically in deeper water during this transition, making bottom rigs with grass shrimp, minnows, or bloodworm pieces effective. Anglers should note that small blue catfish in the 10-14 inch range are present in the Choptank and should be properly disposed of rather than released.

    April provides excellent blue catfish opportunities in the Choptank, with ideal water temperatures encouraging movement from deep channels to nearby shelves and shallower areas. The stretch from Dover Bridge to Denton, and up the Tuckahoe past Route 328 Bridge, offer prime fishing. Cut bait, live small white perch, bluegill, large minnows, and scented baits all produce results.

    Lower Bay Conditions

    Post-spawn striped bass are exiting the Choptank, Nanticoke, Patuxent, and Potomac rivers this week, heading south toward the ocean. Their movement may pause only for the menhaden schools that have entered the lower Bay region – finding these baitfish schools is key to locating striped bass.

    Menhaden schools often move with swift currents along channel edges but can also be found in shallower waters. Trolling and jigging along channel edges is extremely popular, while shallower Bay shores offer light tackle opportunities for casting various lures at passing striped bass.

    Hickory shad fishing continues to excel in the Potomac River within Washington D.C. and Mason Branch of Mattawoman Creek. American shad are also beginning to appear in the Potomac’s deeper waters for anglers using larger shad darts.

    White perch moving down spawning rivers on both Bay sides are providing entertaining fishing as they head to summer habitats. These fish are likely in deeper water during their downstream movement, making small jig heads and bottom rigs with grass shrimp or bloodworms preferred methods.

    Blue catfish are extremely active in ideal water temperatures this month. Prime locations include the Potomac from Route 301 Bridge to Wilson Bridge, the Patuxent from Benedict to Jug Bay, and the Sharptown/Marshyhope section of the Nanticoke. Increasing numbers are being reported in the Wicomico and Pocomoke rivers.

    Freshwater Opportunities

    Trout fishing remains excellent in put-and-take management waters with weekly stockings continuing. Delayed harvest and catch-and-release waters in central and western regions offer opportunities for anglers preferring to release their catch.

    Deep Creek Lake’s 51-degree water temperature is supporting diverse fishing for bluegills, pickerel, and largemouth bass moving into warmer, shallower coves – great for bank and wading anglers. Largemouth bass are positioning near structure like fallen treetops. Walleye season opened April 15 with a 15-inch minimum, five-fish daily limit, and 18-21 inch protected slot.

    Upper Potomac River flows are very low with smallmouth bass spawning activity occurring. Largemouth bass are transitioning from pre-spawn behavior to entering shallow spawning areas where males have prepared nests. Female largemouth bass can be found in transition areas outside shallow spawning sites. Spinnerbaits, paddletails, jerkbaits, stick worms, crankbaits, and soft plastics are all effective choices.

    Chesapeake Channa (northern snakeheads) are becoming more active as temperatures warm, with sunny afternoons offering the best opportunities on shallow, sun-exposed shores. White paddletails are currently the most popular lure choice, while dead-sticking large minnows under bobbers provides additional action.

    Crappie have completed spawning in most areas and are now holding near shoreline structure, marina docks, and bridge piers. Various sunfish species are moving into shallower waters, providing excellent light tackle and fly-fishing opportunities.

    Ocean and Coastal Bay Action

    Surf anglers are experiencing outstanding black drum fishing along Assateague beaches this week. Sand fleas, peeler crab, and clams make effective baits. Dogfish and clearnose skates are also common in the mix – larger dogfish provide excellent smoked or fried nugget meat, though those with pups may need milk soaking to reduce ammonia levels. Striped bass moving up the coast are also being caught, with a one-fish daily limit at 28-31 inches.

    Flounder continue moving through Ocean City Inlet, providing good fishing in the inlet and connecting channels. Tautog are being caught near rocks, bulkheads, docks, and bridge piers in the inlet and Route 50 Bridge areas, with sand fleas being the most popular bait.

    Striped bass fishing offers excellent action in the inlet area and around Route 90 and Verrazzano Bridge piers. Paddletails and soft plastic jigs are the most popular methods, though most action is catch-and-release due to the 28-inch minimum size.

    Charter and private boats venturing to inshore and offshore wreck and reef sites are finding good tautog fishing, with flounder also in the mix.

    Public notices have been issued for the 2026 black sea bass and summer flounder seasons.

  • Three UME Hawks Volleyball Players Receive Northeast Conference Awards

    Three UME Hawks Volleyball Players Receive Northeast Conference Awards

    Three University of Maryland Eastern Shore men’s volleyball players have been honored with Northeast Conference postseason awards for their outstanding performances this season.

    Leading the way is Valentine, who captured Northeast Conference Rookie of the Year recognition while also earning a spot on the NEC First Team All-Conference squad. The freshman made an immediate impact in his debut collegiate season.

    Joining Valentine in receiving conference recognition are teammates Mills and Haynes, both of whom were selected to the NEC Second Team All-Conference roster for their contributions throughout the campaign.

    The honors reflect the strong season put together by the Hawks volleyball program, with three players earning recognition among the conference’s top performers. Valentine’s dual recognition as both the top newcomer and one of the league’s premier players highlights his exceptional first-year campaign.

    The Northeast Conference postseason awards recognize the most outstanding student-athletes across the league based on their athletic performance and contributions to their respective teams during the season.

  • 20-Year-Old 76ers Star V.J. Edgecombe Makes NBA History in Playoff Win

    20-Year-Old 76ers Star V.J. Edgecombe Makes NBA History in Playoff Win

    BOSTON — During a postgame press conference following Philadelphia’s 111-97 Game 2 victory over Boston, Paul George was praising his young teammate V.J. Edgecombe when he suddenly paused with a question.

    “Are you 21 yet?” George asked, turning to face Edgecombe at the podium.

    “No, 20,” Edgecombe replied with a grin.

    The 76ers’ third overall draft selection from last June has entered exclusive territory in just his second playoff appearance, and his performance is no laughing matter.

    “I just try not to overthink it,” Edgecombe explained. “I try not to put pressure on myself. Everybody’s already putting pressure on us to perform. … Plus, I’m around a great group of guys. That also helps me. Just keep instilling confidence in me. Just to keep going, keep going. Regardless of who’s on the floor, who’s not on the floor.”

    The young star’s 30-point, 10-rebound showing made him the first rookie to achieve at least 30 points and 10 rebounds in a playoff contest since Tim Duncan accomplished the feat on May 5, 1998.

    Edgecombe also etched his name in NBA record books as the first rookie ever to combine five three-pointers with 10 rebounds in a postseason game. The stellar outing represented a significant improvement from Game 1, where he managed only 13 points while shooting 6-of-16 from the field.

    According to George, this performance represents the peak of talent they initially witnessed from the Bahamas-born player when he scored 34 points in his professional debut during Philadelphia’s narrow season-opening victory in Boston.

    “When you think about it how he started his first NBA game in this building, I’m sure he was in a small percentage or small group of players that what he did on that opening night,” George commented.

    That debut performance ranks as the third-highest scoring effort for any NBA player in their inaugural game. Wilt Chamberlain holds the record with 43 points for the Philadelphia Warriors in 1959, also grabbing 28 rebounds against New York that evening. Frank Selvy scored 35 points for the Milwaukee Hawks versus Boston in 1954.

    Edgecombe surpassed Allen Iverson’s franchise record of 30 points in a Sixers debut, set in 1996.

    The rookie’s 14 first-quarter points on opening night also established a new NBA record for most points scored in a player’s initial quarter. LeBron James previously held that mark from 2003.

    Throughout the regular season, Edgecombe maintained a 16.0 scoring average across 75 games.

    His playing style carries a charismatic flair that echoes the entertaining approach Iverson brought during his Philadelphia years.

    During Tuesday’s victory, after sinking his final shot of the evening — a long-range three-pointer over Payton Pritchard that extended Philadelphia’s lead to 105-92 following Boston’s rally to 91-89 — Edgecombe winked at the television camera while running back on defense.

    George believes this is merely a preview of Edgecombe’s potential.

    “To put a whole season together and get to a point where he’s showcasing who he is and his abilities. I’ve been saying all year long he’s far past a rookie,” George stated. “It’s just impressive, man. (Edgecombe had) 30 and 10, but it’s just what we needed in the moments throughout the game when he took over, and kind of just put us at ease.”

    The evening wasn’t without challenges for Edgecombe, who suffered a hard fall onto his back early in the contest, causing him to limp to the locker room during both the first and third quarters.

    However, Edgecombe dismissed any concerns about the injury affecting his availability for the remainder of the series.

    “I just landed on my back, but I’m good. I was able to finish the game so I’m good,” he stated. “That’s all I’ve got for you. I’m good, ain’t nothing wrong with me. I’m good.”

  • Dallas Cowboys Will Keep Star Receiver Pickens on Franchise Tag

    Dallas Cowboys Will Keep Star Receiver Pickens on Franchise Tag

    FRISCO, Texas — Dallas Cowboys leadership announced Wednesday they will not pursue contract negotiations with star wide receiver George Pickens, opting instead to have him compete under the franchise tag designation for the upcoming season.

    The 25-year-old receiver has yet to sign the franchise tender valued at $27.3 million, meaning he could skip mandatory minicamp in June without facing financial consequences. The team’s offseason activities begin Monday on a voluntary basis.

    “We’ve made a decision that we’re going to have George play under the franchise tag, which won’t be a first for us,” said Stephen Jones, the team’s executive vice president of personnel. “So there won’t be negotiations on a long-term deal. But that’s certainly not a first for this organization and certainly won’t be a first in the league in terms of this decision as we move forward.”

    While Stephen Jones indicated he hasn’t spoken with Pickens lately, team owner Jerry Jones and head coach Brian Schottenheimer recently held discussions with the receiver.

    “It was good,” Schottenheimer commented during the Cowboys’ pre-draft media session ahead of Thursday evening’s NFL draft. “The thing that George knows about Jerry and myself is we’re very upfront and we’re honest. We had great conversation. We informed him. We think that’s important because that’s the way we handle all of our players and coaches.”

    Pickens’ representative, David Mulugheta, has not yet responded to media inquiries regarding the situation.

    Following his trade from Pittsburgh during the previous offseason, Pickens achieved personal bests with 93 receptions, 1,429 receiving yards, and nine touchdowns while contributing to one of the NFL’s most productive offensive units. However, Dallas struggled defensively and posted a 7-9-1 record, extending their playoff absence to two consecutive seasons.

    The Georgia product, selected in the second round of the 2022 draft, formed an effective partnership with CeeDee Lamb, who is entering his second season of a four-year, $136 million extension that places him among the league’s highest-paid receivers at $34 million annually.

    Lamb staged a holdout throughout the 2024 offseason and training camp before finalizing his contract approximately two weeks prior to the season opener.

    Dallas was unable to apply the franchise tag to Lamb due to his rookie contract structure. First-round selections include a fifth-year team option, while second-round picks like Pickens complete four-year agreements. Pickens earned $6.8 million during his initial NFL contract.

    During his Pittsburgh tenure, Pickens demonstrated exceptional ability but also displayed concerning behavioral patterns that prompted former coach Mike Tomlin to question his professional maturity.

    Although Schottenheimer avoided public criticism of Pickens during his inaugural head coaching campaign after 25 years as an assistant, both Pickens and Lamb were disciplined with a first-series benching in Las Vegas after violating team curfew following a casino visit.

    “There’s a lot of things that go into that,” Stephen Jones explained regarding the decision to avoid long-term negotiations this offseason. “Let’s start with the fact that it’s not easy having two receivers being paid top of the market. A quarterback that’s been here, being the highest-paid player in this league for many years now.”

    “The other thing is the newness of George being here,” Stephen Jones continued. “I think George has just done an amazing job. I mean he’s exceeded all expectations. And a lot of those things, they make their way toward a long-term deal, but that’s the biggest part of it — between the business and newness of it, I think that’s a big part of it.”

  • New Study: 988 Mental Health Hotline Linked to 4,400 Fewer Teen Suicide Deaths

    New Study: 988 Mental Health Hotline Linked to 4,400 Fewer Teen Suicide Deaths

    A groundbreaking new study reveals that approximately 4,400 fewer American teenagers and young adults lost their lives to suicide than researchers anticipated during the initial two-and-a-half years following the introduction of the 988 mental health crisis hotline, indicating the program’s effectiveness despite ongoing funding concerns.

    According to research published Wednesday in JAMA, suicide fatalities among individuals aged 15 to 23 dropped 11% below projected numbers from July 2022 — when the crisis line began operations — through December 2024.

    “The 988 program is one of the largest federal investments in suicide prevention in U.S. history — roughly $1.5 billion cumulative — and our findings suggest that investment has translated into measurable reductions in young adult suicide deaths,” said Dr. Vishal Patel, a clinical fellow at Harvard Medical School and the paper’s lead author.

    To conduct their analysis, researchers examined nationwide death certificate data spanning from 1999 to 2022 to create projections for suicide mortality rates had the 988 hotline never been established. These estimates were then measured against actual death statistics.

    While researchers acknowledge they cannot definitively attribute the decrease solely to the 988 service, and overall U.S. suicide rates have generally declined, they conducted multiple comparative analyses to validate their conclusions, Patel explained.

    Their investigation revealed that the ten states experiencing the most significant increases in call volume after 988’s debut also demonstrated substantially larger differences between projected and actual suicide deaths. The reductions were more pronounced among younger demographics compared to individuals over 65, who utilize the service less frequently. Additionally, no comparable changes were observed in England, which lacked a similar hotline during the research timeframe.

    These findings align with earlier research studies.

    “Studies show that after speaking with a trained crisis counselor, most people who contact the 988 Lifeline are significantly more likely to feel less depressed, less suicidal, less overwhelmed and more hopeful,” a spokesperson for the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, which funds the hotline, said in response to the study.

    Jill Harkavy-Friedman, who directs the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention’s research program and was not part of the study, described the findings as “very heartening and very positive.” While she hopes to see additional research confirming these results, she praised the authors for conducting a “great deal of work” to eliminate other potential factors contributing to the decline.

    The comprehensive mental health system plays a crucial role in reducing suicide rates, Harkavy-Friedman emphasized. The 988 hotline’s ability to guide users through this system, assist with safety planning, connect callers to local crisis intervention teams, and provide referrals for extended care has resulted in “extraordinary” outcomes, she noted. Having immediate access to support during a crisis moment can also prove life-saving.

    “That is the strength of the crisis line,” Harkavy-Friedman said. “When you call, it de-escalates the crisis so the person has greater capacity to address whatever it is that’s driving their emotions at the moment.”

    Mental health experts emphasize that the current combination of federal and state funding for call centers remains inadequate to address the actual level of demand.

    Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s federal budget proposal maintains consistent 988 funding at $534.6 million for fiscal year 2027, anticipating 11 million contacts during the coming year.

    While the hotline “is not a panacea for preventing suicide death,” the number of lives it has preserved “is a really big deal and underscores the need for sustained investment in 988 from federal, and especially state, lawmakers,” said Jonathan Purtle, a New York University mental health policy researcher.

    During a Capitol Hill hearing Tuesday, Sen. Tammy Baldwin urged Kennedy to fulfill a “legal requirement” to reinstate 988’s specialized line for LGBTQ+ youth. The administration suddenly terminated the program last summer, despite research showing this population experiences disproportionately elevated suicide rates.

    “Yes, we are working on getting it up now,” Kennedy responded to the Wisconsin Democrat. Representatives from the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration and the Department of Health and Human Services did not immediately provide The Associated Press with a timeline or specifics regarding the restoration.

    Patel emphasized that specialized services for high-risk populations — including the LGBTQ+ line — are essential components of the program’s success.

    “Our findings should be read as evidence that this is a program worth preserving and expanding, not one to scale back,” he said.

    EDITOR’S NOTE: This story discusses suicide. If you or someone you know needs help, the national suicide and crisis lifeline is available by calling or texting 988.

  • Israelis Mark Independence Day at West Bank Spring Amid Regional Tensions

    Israelis Mark Independence Day at West Bank Spring Amid Regional Tensions

    AUJA, West Bank — Hundreds of Israelis marked their nation’s Independence Day Wednesday by swimming and enjoying outdoor festivities at a natural spring located in the occupied West Bank territory. The daylong celebration in Auja featured families picnicking and recreational activities, all under the watchful eye of Israeli military personnel.

    The festive atmosphere stood in stark contrast to the ongoing conflict and recent displacement of Palestinian residents throughout the Jordan Valley region. The spring site has been transformed into recreational facilities primarily utilized by Israeli visitors, highlighting broader disputes over water resources in the West Bank. While Palestinian communities face severe water shortages, Israeli settlements maintain significantly better access to water supplies.

    During the celebration, attendees gathered beneath a memorial flag displaying the image of a 21-year-old Israeli who was killed during a Hamas attack in June 2023. The commemoration comes as 2024 has witnessed continued settler attacks against Palestinian populations, including the forced removal of 600 residents from a neighboring community this past January.

  • Iran Strikes Three More Ships Near Strait of Hormuz, Adding to Global Energy Crisis

    Iran Strikes Three More Ships Near Strait of Hormuz, Adding to Global Energy Crisis

    Fresh uncertainty gripped the Strait of Hormuz Wednesday as Iranian forces launched strikes against three vessels near the vital shipping channel, intensifying a global energy emergency that began when tankers transporting one-fifth of the world’s petroleum were prevented from navigating the passage.

    The latest incidents occurred merely 24 hours following President Donald Trump’s announcement that he would prolong the two-week truce with Iran. Tehran justified the assault on three departing vessels, capturing two of them, describing the action as payback for America’s maritime blockade of Iranian harbors and Washington’s attack and seizure of an Iranian vessel that failed to respond when contacted by blockade enforcement ships.

    Maritime assaults had decreased beginning in mid-March when Iran established effective dominance over the waterway. The simple threat of attack proved sufficient to discourage vessels from attempting passage, though some ships utilized an Iranian-sanctioned route along the coastline. Iran required information about cargo, ownership and personnel and, in certain instances, levied a $1 per barrel fee on petroleum and related products — equivalent to $2 million for large tankers.

    Here’s an examination of what is confirmed and uncertain regarding the strait’s current situation:

    Iran’s semi-official media outlets announced that the paramilitary Revolutionary Guard struck a third vessel Wednesday within the strait. Nour News, Fars and Mehr all documented the Guard’s attack on a ship named the Euphoria. They reported the vessel had become “stranded” along Iran’s shoreline, providing no additional details. Iranian state television separately confirmed that the Guard captured the other two attacked ships.

    This event followed two maritime attacks Saturday that broke a calm period that started in mid-March.

    The captured vessels were the Liberia-flagged Epaminondas and Panama-flagged MSC Francesca, both cargo ships. The conditions under which these ships attempted strait passage remained unclear. MSC shipping company failed to respond to email inquiries about the vessel.

    These attacks follow an abrupt change in Iran’s position over the weekend, after the Iranian foreign minister declared Friday that the strait remained open, only to face contradiction the following day from the Revolutionary Guard. Six cruise vessels trapped in the Persian Gulf since late February capitalized on the brief opportunity and navigated through the strait. However, maritime traffic has since ceased.

    The renewed attacks partially reflect “genuine confusion … about when passage is permitted,” according to Torbjorn Soltvedt, principal Middle East analyst at risk intelligence firm Verisk Maplecroft.

    Contradictory messages came from Trump regarding complete reopening and from Iran’s foreign minister about limited reopening. Then circumstances “shifted very quickly” Saturday when the Guard declared the strait closed.

    Furthermore, Soltvedt noted, Iran benefits from maintaining elevated insurance costs through intermittent attacks. “Their main leverage in negotiations with the U.S. is being able to restrict shipping through the Strait of Hormuz, and insurance is a big part of that.”

    Several vessels have successfully navigated Iran’s approval process, while others have depended on diplomatic appeals from their home nations. Nevertheless, hundreds of ships and thousands of crew members remain stranded.

    The U.S. Navy intercepted and captured a large tanker carrying Iranian petroleum south of the Bay of Bengal in the Indian Ocean, approximately 2,000 miles from the strait. This action highlighted America’s capability to seize vessels violating the blockade long after departing the strait’s vicinity.

    The U.S. military, enforcing the blockade in the Gulf of Oman and Arabian Sea, distant from Iranian drones and speedboats, reports turning back 20 Iran-connected vessels.

    Nevertheless, shipping intelligence firms indicate that numerous ships carrying Iranian oil have bypassed the blockade. Lloyd’s List Intelligence reports “a steady flow of shadow fleet traffic” has moved in and out of the gulf, including 11 tankers with Iranian cargo that departed the gulf outside the strait since April 13.

    “The dilemma for the U.S. is: The tighter the blockade, the greater the pain is in the global oil market, so there are conflicting priorities there, and it seems there is a policy of not intercepting every single shipment of Iranian oil,” Soltvedt explained.

    Moreover, nearly all that petroleum flows to China, requiring the U.S. to manage that relationship carefully, with Trump scheduled to visit from May 14 to 15.

    Captain Tim Hawkins, U.S. Central Command spokesman, confirmed Wednesday that the military blockade targets all Iranian ships entering or departing Iranian ports. However, he stated humanitarian shipments, including food, medical supplies and other civilian essentials, receive approval following inspection.

    Hawkins disputed external reports of ships evading the U.S. network and referenced comments by U.S. Central Command chief Admiral Brad Cooper, who stated Friday that “no ship has evaded U.S. forces.”

    Ship operators and insurers will require more than a basic peace agreement announcement to risk strait passage as they did before the conflict.

    Even following the war’s conclusion, analytical and data company Rystad Energy predicts it will require six to eight weeks simply to reorganize the global tanker network. Ship operators and insurers would need two to five weeks to become comfortable with new operating conditions and resume standard operations.

    Ship operators desire “something that’s a bit more concrete than what we have now,” Soltvedt stated. “What is needed is something more comprehensive” than an informal ceasefire with both sides remaining far apart on crucial issues including Iran’s nuclear and ballistic missile programs.

    “Even then, shipping companies will have the long-term threat hanging over them” considering Iran’s missile and drone capabilities, he added. “They can play this card again in the future.”

  • Western States Face Power Crisis as Historic Drought Forces Massive Water Transfers

    Western States Face Power Crisis as Historic Drought Forces Massive Water Transfers

    FORT COLLINS, Colo. (AP) — Eastern Utah’s canyons will experience massive water releases this spring — equivalent to the flow of 50,000 toilets continuously flushing — as federal officials scramble to preserve electrical generation for hundreds of thousands of homes throughout the western United States.

    While the rushing waters of the Green and Colorado rivers may appear to bring relief to the arid landscape of red rock formations and desert vegetation, the reality tells a different story.

    Following the most severe winter drought on record, authorities plan to dramatically increase Lake Powell’s water levels this spring to preserve the reservoir’s hydroelectric capabilities. Their strategy involves releasing up to one-third of Flaming Gorge Reservoir’s water supply in Wyoming and Utah, surpassing even the record-breaking 2022 emergency release that maintained power generation.

    Glen Canyon Dam creates Lake Powell, which generates clean, affordable electricity for more than 350,000 households. However, this solution creates mounting challenges throughout a disputed river system that serves ranchers, businesses, and approximately 40 million residential water users.

    At Flaming Gorge in southwestern Wyoming, marina operators Tony and Jen Valdez are monitoring water levels that officials expect to drop 10 feet by summer’s end due to the planned releases. This decline will force boaters to travel increasingly longer distances to reach the water.

    “Of course we’re concerned,” Jen Valdez said. “And it will probably get to a point where we’ll need to be more concerned.”

    Should the plan proceed without weather intervention, Flaming Gorge could fall as much as 27 feet within twelve months, leaving Buckboard Marina significantly stranded from the waterline.

    While potentially offering temporary relief during the extended drought, the strategy will create additional downstream consequences as Bureau of Reclamation officials plan to retain more water than normal in Lake Powell along the Arizona-Utah border.

    Further downstream, Lake Mead near Las Vegas is projected to reach levels similar to four years ago when receding waters exposed sunken vessels and human skeletal remains.

    Federal authorities explain these extreme actions are essential to maintain Lake Powell’s water level high enough for turbine operation without allowing air into the system, which could cause significant mechanical damage.

    Approximately 155 customers spanning cities, tribal nations, rural electric cooperatives, and public utility districts receive hydroelectric power from Glen Canyon Dam and other federal facilities. No customer depends entirely on hydropower.

    Most serve economically disadvantaged communities and operate as nonprofit organizations that fund dam operations, maintenance, and federal infrastructure investments.

    The Western Area Power Administration maintains contractual commitments to supply specific electricity amounts to its customers. Losing hydropower would force WAPA to purchase more expensive, non-renewable energy from alternative sources, explained Leslie James, executive director of the nonprofit Colorado River Energy Distributors Association.

    “If Glen Canyon hydropower is reduced to zero or a low amount, it will have different impacts on what they charge communities,” James said.

    James described the situation as unprecedented in her 48 years assisting electricity customers across Arizona, Colorado, Nevada, New Mexico, Utah and Wyoming.

    Market electricity purchases replacing federal hydropower have driven rate increases for five consecutive years at Heber Light & Power southeast of Salt Lake City, with the most recent increase reaching 13%, according to Emily Brandt, the utility’s energy resource manager.

    Persistent drought conditions, evaporation, and water consumption — particularly for cattle industry alfalfa irrigation — have reduced Lake Powell to 3,526 feet above sea level, representing just 23% of maximum capacity.

    Power generation requires the reservoir to remain above 3,490 feet, the elevation of Glen Canyon Dam’s water intake systems.

    This critical threshold has never been reached since the 710-foot dam’s completion in 1963 and Lake Powell’s gradual filling to capacity by 1980.

    During 2022, the Bureau of Reclamation conducted an unprecedented release of 500,000 acre-feet from Flaming Gorge to boost Lake Powell. The current planned releases to maintain Lake Powell’s power generation could ultimately reach twice that volume.

    Simultaneously, retaining 1.5 million acre-feet in Lake Powell will reduce Hoover Dam’s electricity production by 40% as Lake Mead levels continue declining.

    An additional concern involves warm surface water from Lake Powell potentially promoting smallmouth bass populations, an invasive species that threatens the native humpback chub in the Colorado River below Glen Canyon Dam. Environmental groups including the Grand Canyon Trust advocate mixing deeper, cooler water to maintain conditions unfavorable to smallmouth bass in the Grand Canyon.

    The most intensive Flaming Gorge releases in coming days and weeks will be timed to benefit native fish species in the Green River, a Colorado River tributary.

    Flaming Gorge will ultimately decline from 83% to an estimated 59% capacity. The 2022 Flaming Gorge releases were followed by substantial winter precipitation, temporarily easing regional water concerns.

    “We kind of got saved by Mother Nature,” said Valdez, the Buckboard Marina owner.

    However, one or two wet years cannot reverse the 25-year “megadrought” caused partly by human-driven climate change. Despite this, Valdez remains hopeful for returning wet weather patterns.

    “Hopefully we can expand into doing some other things,” Valdez said. “Because it’s going to come back eventually.”

  • Virginia Democrats Score Redistricting Victory, But Legal Battles Continue

    Virginia Democrats Score Redistricting Victory, But Legal Battles Continue

    Virginia Democrats marked a significant victory Wednesday following a ballot measure success that positions them favorably in the nationwide redistricting battle initiated by President Donald Trump to maintain Republican control of the House during this year’s midterm elections, though the fight is far from over.

    The Virginia Supreme Court must now determine if Democratic legislators broke procedural guidelines when they placed a constitutional amendment on the ballot that authorizes new U.S. House districts potentially helping Democrats secure up to four extra seats statewide. Should the court find violations, it could nullify the map that voters approved by a narrow margin on Tuesday.

    Upcoming developments in Florida will also play a crucial role.

    Florida’s Republican-dominated Legislature plans to convene in special session next week, called by GOP Governor Ron DeSantis partly to create a new map that would increase the party’s congressional representation in that state. The U.S. Supreme Court expects to deliver a ruling by late June on a Louisiana case that might eliminate a critical section of the Voting Rights Act, potentially triggering redrawn political boundaries throughout the South, although most changes couldn’t take effect until 2028.

    Following Virginia voters’ approval of the amendment, Democrats can provisionally assert they gained 10 seats nationwide through mid-decade redistricting, versus the nine Republicans claim. Even if circumstances shift back toward the GOP, the ultimate outcome of Trump’s initiative would represent only a modest gain in Republican-friendly House districts during a period when his approval numbers are declining and Republican concerns about losing congressional control in November are mounting.

    “We have successfully blunted Trump’s attempt to completely hijack the midterms,” stated John Bisognano, president of the National Democratic Redistricting Committee.

    Numerous Republicans expressed similar sentiments.

    “The GOP will now lose net seats across the country. If you’re going to pick a fight, at least win it,” posted Ari Fleischer, former spokesman for President George W. Bush, on social media platform X following the Virginia vote. “All this was foreseeable and avoidable. We should not have started this fight.”

    Adam Kincaid, executive director of the National Republican Redistricting Trust, contended it’s premature to name either party the winner.

    “It’s an ongoing process with many legal challenges pending, and it’s far too early for sweeping statements on the final outcome,” he explained.

    Trump attempted to discredit the Virginia outcome Wednesday by making baseless fraud allegations similar to those he voiced after his 2020 presidential election defeat. He labeled the Virginia vote “RIGGED” and “Crooked” on his social media platform, adding: “Let’s see if the Courts will fix this travesty of ‘Justice.’”

    Redistricting normally occurs once per decade following each census, unless a court mandates changes. However, last summer Trump advocated for redrawing maps in Texas, encouraging the state’s Republican-controlled Legislature to create up to five winnable House seats for his party. Trump subsequently began urging other Republican-led states to take similar action. Missouri, North Carolina and Ohio have since established more GOP-favorable districts alongside Texas.

    Democrats initiated their counteroffensive, despite facing greater limitations because several Democratic-controlled states had maps created by independent commissions rather than elected officials.

    To respond to Texas, California’s Democratic Governor Gavin Newsom urged the Democratic-controlled Legislature to include a redistricting measure on last fall’s ballot. After voters overwhelmingly supported it, the initiative will substitute a commission-approved map with one potentially giving Democrats five additional seats.

    Democrats regained control of both the Legislature and governor’s office in Virginia during November elections and quickly moved to mirror California’s strategy with an even more ambitious redistricting proposal. It substitutes a congressional map imposed by a court following the previous census that resulted in a 6-5 Democratic advantage with one allowing Democrats to potentially capture as many as 10 seats.

    “We are not going to let anyone tilt the system without a response,” declared state Senate President L. Louise Lucas during a Wednesday news conference.

    In Washington, U.S. House Democratic leader Hakeem Jeffries of New York issued a warning to Florida Republicans, who have shown open anxiety about redrawing their district lines and potentially diluting their core voter base before an election that seems to be moving against them.

    “Our message to Florida Republicans right now is, ‘F around and find out,’” Jeffries stated.

    House Majority Forward, the nonprofit division of the super political action committee supporting House Democrats, has invested nearly $60 million to counter Republican redistricting initiatives. Approximately $40 million of that amount went toward the Virginia campaign.

    Florida faces an additional hurdle in the form of an anti-gerrymandering constitutional amendment that state voters passed in 2010. Any new Florida map would likely prompt substantial legal action, though six of the seven state Supreme Court justices received appointments from Republicans.

    The Virginia initiative carries its own legal complications. Republicans have contested the procedure Democrats employed to place the measure on the ballot, and the state Supreme Court chose to postpone scheduling arguments until after the vote occurred. The timing of a potential ruling remains uncertain.

    “The ballot box was never the final word here,” Virginia House Republican leader Terry Kilgore said in a statement following Tuesday’s vote. “Serious legal questions remain about both the wording of this referendum and the process used to put it before voters.”

    The U.S. Supreme Court holds the most significant legal uncertainty. Its conservative majority might eliminate a Voting Rights Act requirement that mapmakers in areas with substantial minority populations create districts more conducive to electing minority candidates.

    This provision has resulted in the establishment of several majority-minority congressional seats, particularly throughout the South. Without it, Republicans in conservative states could further reduce the number of U.S. House seats Democrats could win.

    However, it’s improbable that any state besides Louisiana, which filed the lawsuit the high court will decide, could modify its congressional boundaries before November even if the court strikes down that provision, known as Section Two. This is because the November election has already officially begun in most states, with candidate filing deadlines and, in some instances, primary elections already completed.

  • Two Dead, 19 Hospitalized After Chemical Leak at West Virginia Silver Plant

    Two Dead, 19 Hospitalized After Chemical Leak at West Virginia Silver Plant

    INSTITUTE, W.Va. — Two workers have died and 19 others required hospitalization following a deadly chemical incident at a West Virginia precious metals facility, according to emergency officials.

    The dangerous leak happened at Catalyst Refiners in Institute while employees were working to close down portions of the silver recovery operation, according to Kanawha County Commission Emergency Management Director C.W. Sigman.

    Officials say the incident involved a dangerous interaction between nitric acid and another chemical compound. “A violent reaction of the chemicals and it instantaneously overreacted,” Sigman explained during a press conference.

    Sigman noted that “Starting or ending a chemical reaction are the most dangerous times.”

    Seven emergency responders who arrived at the scene were among those requiring medical treatment, authorities confirmed.

    Emergency officials said some victims were transported to medical facilities in personal vehicles, with one person even taken to the hospital in a garbage truck, according to Sigman.

    Area residents were ordered to shelter in place for more than five hours before the directive was lifted. Emergency management officials confirmed that all fatalities and injuries happened within the plant’s boundaries.

    “You had to get really close to the facility to smell it,” Sigman reported.

    The incident triggered a massive decontamination response where exposed individuals had to strip off all clothing and undergo chemical washdown procedures, emergency officials said.

    The facility specializes in extracting silver from industrial waste materials and can recover thousands of dollars worth of precious metals simply by cleaning office floors at manufacturing plants, according to Sigman.

    Ames Goldsmith Corp., which owns the Catalyst Refiners operation, expressed grief over the tragic outcome and solidarity with affected families.

    “This is an unfathomably difficult time,” the company said in a statement released during the briefing. “Our thoughts and prayers are with our colleagues and their families.”

    The parent company pledged full cooperation with local, state and federal investigators examining the cause of the incident.

    The facility is situated near Institute, a small community located approximately 10 miles west of Charleston, West Virginia’s capital city.

  • Southeast Wildfires Destroy Nearly 50 Homes, Force Mass Evacuations

    Southeast Wildfires Destroy Nearly 50 Homes, Force Mass Evacuations

    NAHUNTA, Ga. — Devastating blazes continued to spread throughout the Southeast on Wednesday, leaving nearly 50 homes destroyed in Georgia while prompting widespread evacuations and school shutdowns across multiple communities.

    The most severe fires were concentrated along Georgia’s coastline and in areas surrounding Jacksonville, Florida, where officials say the state is experiencing one of its most catastrophic fire seasons in recent decades. While the origin of these wildfires remains under investigation, extended drought conditions combined with low moisture levels and powerful winds have created ideal conditions for rapid fire spread.

    Georgia’s two largest fires have consumed more than 31 square miles combined, with at least four additional smaller blazes reported statewide. The hardest-hit regions are experiencing exceptional or extreme drought conditions — the most severe classifications according to federal drought monitoring systems.

    In Brantley County, located in southeast Georgia, a rapidly advancing wildfire continued threatening additional properties Wednesday after destroying 47 homes the previous day, County Manager Joey Cason reported.

    The blaze expanded roughly six-fold in just twelve hours on Tuesday, Cason explained during Wednesday’s press briefing. Nearly two dozen firefighting agencies have joined efforts to combat the flames.

    Sheriff Len Davis of Brantley County urged residents to prepare for potential evacuation, emphasizing that wind patterns could change suddenly and without warning.

    Federal Emergency Management Agency officials report that approximately 800 people have been evacuated from the county, with five emergency shelters now operational as the fire poses risks to an additional 300 homes.

    A separate major fire originating in Clinch County has also triggered evacuations across several communities, according to the Georgia Forestry Association. Association President and CEO Tim Lowrimore described the situation, stating: “This is a serious and evolving situation.”

    Florida firefighters were simultaneously confronting 131 active wildfires Wednesday, which have scorched 34 square miles primarily across the state’s northern regions.

    Fire suppression equipment has been strategically positioned throughout Florida to ensure rapid response capabilities, Agriculture Commissioner Wilton Simpson announced.

    Simpson warned: “Florida has got one of the worst fire seasons in maybe the last 30 or 40 years or it’s turning out to be that way. We’ve been in drought for 18 months now all across the state.”

    Train service disruptions affected Amtrak operations Monday in northeastern Florida due to wildfire activity. Normal service resumed Wednesday, confirmed Amtrak representative Beth Toll.

    Weather officials warned that dangerous combinations of minimal humidity and gusty winds would maintain elevated fire risks Wednesday.

    Smoke plumes reached major metropolitan areas including Atlanta, Savannah, Georgia, and Jacksonville, Florida. Air quality measurements in southern Georgia deteriorated to unhealthy levels Wednesday, potentially affecting all area residents.

    The Atlanta-Fulton County Emergency Management Agency predicted smoky conditions would persist throughout the Atlanta region Wednesday, despite the primary fires burning more than 200 miles southeast of the metropolitan area.

    Meteorologists forecast continued high fire danger each afternoon through Friday due to persistently dry environmental conditions.

  • Taiwan’s TSMC to Build Advanced Chip Packaging Facility in Arizona by 2029

    Taiwan’s TSMC to Build Advanced Chip Packaging Facility in Arizona by 2029

    Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company has announced plans to establish an advanced chip packaging facility in Arizona, with operations targeted to begin before 2029, according to a company executive.

    The facility will address a critical supply chain bottleneck affecting modern artificial intelligence processors. Today’s AI chips, including those produced by Nvidia, consist of multiple components bonded together using sophisticated packaging techniques, a process that has created supply constraints for major tech companies.

    During a technology conference in Santa Clara, California on Wednesday, TSMC officials confirmed that construction work has already commenced. The company had previously announced in January that it was seeking permits to build its first advanced packaging facility within an existing Arizona location, though no completion date was provided at that time.

    “We are aggressively expanding our own capability within the Arizona facility,” stated Kevin Zhang, deputy co-chief operations officer and senior vice president, during remarks made Tuesday before the conference. “We are going to build a CoWoS capability and 3D-IC capability there before 2029, so that’s still our goal,” Zhang explained, referencing two highly sought-after packaging technologies developed by TSMC.

    Currently, major clients including Apple and Nvidia receive semiconductor chips from TSMC’s Arizona manufacturing facility, but those components must be shipped back to Taiwan for final packaging processes.

    Competing firm Amkor Technology announced last year its intention to construct a packaging facility in Arizona in partnership with Apple and Nvidia, with completion scheduled for mid-2027 and production beginning in early 2028, ahead of TSMC’s projected timeline. TSMC and Amkor revealed in 2024 their collaboration to bring multiple advanced packaging technologies to Arizona, though specific details of their partnership remain undisclosed.

    Zhang indicated that technology discussions between Amkor and TSMC are continuing. “We are partnering with them to see what kind of technology capability they can offer to our customers in order to accelerate some of the products to be manufactured in the U.S.,” Zhang noted. “There are still some moving parts. I would say we are definitely looking at all possibilities to have a very diverse manufacturing footprint.”

  • Taiwan Chip Giant Develops Faster Processors Using Current Equipment

    Taiwan Chip Giant Develops Faster Processors Using Current Equipment

    Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co revealed its latest chip production advances on Wednesday, demonstrating how the company can develop smaller and faster processors while avoiding the purchase of expensive new equipment from Dutch supplier ASML.

    The global manufacturing leader, which produces semiconductors for major tech companies including Nvidia, Apple and Google, unveiled two enhanced production methods during its presentation in Santa Clara, California. The first technique, designated A13, is scheduled for commercial production in 2029 and will primarily serve artificial intelligence applications. The second method, called N2U, offers a more cost-effective approach for manufacturing chips used in smartphones, laptops, and AI systems.

    Rather than investing in ASML’s newest “high NA” extreme-ultraviolet lithography machines, which cost approximately $400 million each—double the price of current models—TSMC plans to maximize the capabilities of its existing EUV equipment for all the technologies demonstrated Wednesday.

    “This is where I think our R&D has done exceptionally well in terms of leveraging existing EUV technology while setting an aggressive technology scaling roadmap,” stated Kevin Zhang, deputy co-chief operations officer and senior vice president, in an interview with Reuters. “This is definitely a strength.”

    While the improvements in chip size and speed are incremental, TSMC also presented ambitious plans for connecting complex AI processors, an area where industry experts anticipate companies like Nvidia will achieve the greatest performance improvements in upcoming years. Current AI systems such as Nvidia’s Vera Rubin, launching this year and manufactured by TSMC, incorporate two large processing units and eight high-bandwidth memory modules. By 2028, TSMC projects it will possess the capability to combine 10 large chips with 20 memory modules.

    The famous Moore’s Law, named for Intel CEO Gordon Moore, forecasted that computing capability would approximately double every two years while becoming more affordable. Recently, some industry leaders including Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang have questioned whether this principle remains valid.

    According to Dan Hutcheson, vice chair of TechInsights, TSMC is essentially extending Moore’s Law through its chip-connecting technology.

    “Moore’s law is morphing from a monolithic, single die in a package to multi-die in a package,” Hutcheson explained in an interview. “And that allows the power and performance gains.”

    However, combining multiple chips creates unique engineering obstacles. The processors generate heat during operation, and the various materials used in packaging expand at different rates, presenting new challenges for chip designers.

    According to Ian Cutress, chief analyst at consultancy More Than Moore, large chip assemblies can warp and fracture, problems that affected Nvidia’s Rubin AI processor.

    “(TSMC) aren’t addressing directly how they are solving those challenges,” Cutress noted.

  • Russia: Putin Will Only Meet Ukraine’s Leader to Finalize Peace Deal

    Russia: Putin Will Only Meet Ukraine’s Leader to Finalize Peace Deal

    Moscow announced Wednesday that Russian President Vladimir Putin would only consider meeting with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy if the discussion centers on completing final peace agreements to end the ongoing conflict.

    Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov told Russian state television that the purpose of any potential meeting must be clearly defined and productive.

    “The main thing is the goal of this meeting. Why should they meet? Putin has said he is ready for a meeting in Moscow at any moment,” Peskov stated during the Wednesday interview, according to TASS news agency.

    The Russian official emphasized that meaningful dialogue requires clear objectives. “The main thing is that there should be a reason to meet, and the main thing is that the meeting should be productive. And it can only be for the purpose of finalising agreements,” Peskov explained.

    The comments suggest Russia’s leadership remains open to diplomatic discussions, but only under specific conditions focused on reaching a final resolution to the conflict.

  • U.S. Red Meat Production Falls 2% in 2025, USDA Reports

    U.S. Red Meat Production Falls 2% in 2025, USDA Reports

    The United States saw a 2 percent decline in commercial red meat production during 2025, according to newly released federal data.

    The U.S. Department of Agriculture’s National Agricultural Statistics Service published its yearly livestock slaughter report showing the drop in production levels across the country.

    The annual summary provides comprehensive data on commercial meat processing operations throughout the United States, tracking production trends that impact both farmers and consumers nationwide.

  • US Poultry Industry Shows Growth in Egg Production and Chick Placement

    US Poultry Industry Shows Growth in Egg Production and Chick Placement

    The United States poultry industry is showing signs of growth, according to recent data from the National Agricultural Statistics Service.

    Nationwide statistics reveal that broiler-type egg setting has increased by 2 percent compared to previous periods. Additionally, the placement of broiler-type chicks across the country has risen by 4 percent.

    These figures suggest positive momentum in the American chicken production industry, with both upstream egg setting and downstream chick placement showing upward trends.

  • Major Dairy States See March Milk Output Rise 2.4% from Previous Year

    Major Dairy States See March Milk Output Rise 2.4% from Previous Year

    The country’s leading dairy-producing states experienced a notable increase in milk output during the month of March, according to new federal data.

    The 24 states that dominate America’s dairy industry collectively produced 19.6 billion pounds of milk in March, marking a 2.4 percent rise when compared to March of the previous year.

    The production figures highlight continued growth in the nation’s dairy sector as farmers and agricultural operations maintain steady output levels across major milk-producing regions.

  • DSU Senior Christopher Johnson Named MEAC Field Athlete of the Week

    DSU Senior Christopher Johnson Named MEAC Field Athlete of the Week

    Delaware State University senior Christopher Johnson has been selected as the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference Men’s Field Athlete of the Week, officials announced Tuesday from Norfolk, Virginia.

    The recognition highlights Johnson’s outstanding performance in field events for the Hornets’ outdoor track and field program. The MEAC weekly honors are awarded to student-athletes who demonstrate exceptional athletic achievement in their respective events.

    Johnson’s selection marks a significant accomplishment for both the senior athlete and Delaware State’s track and field program as they continue their outdoor season competition.

  • Pike Creek Road Lane Closures Continue Through Late Afternoon

    Pike Creek Road Lane Closures Continue Through Late Afternoon

    Drivers traveling on Pike Creek Road should expect delays this afternoon as construction crews continue work that requires periodic lane restrictions.

    The Delaware Department of Transportation reports that the roadway between Abbey Drive and Larkspur Road is experiencing intermittent lane closures as part of ongoing construction activities.

    Officials say the lane restrictions will remain in effect until 4:30 PM today. Motorists are advised to plan alternate routes or allow extra travel time when using this section of Pike Creek Road.

    DelDOT continues to monitor the construction progress and will update drivers when normal traffic patterns resume.

  • Newark Man Arrested on Gun, Drug Charges After Tinted Window Traffic Stop

    Newark Man Arrested on Gun, Drug Charges After Tinted Window Traffic Stop

    A traffic stop for illegally tinted windows led to the arrest of a Newark man on weapons and drug charges last week, according to Newark Police Department officials.

    Officers from the department’s Special Operations Unit pulled over a vehicle in the vicinity of Elkton Road and O’Daniel Avenue on April 15 around 3:19 p.m. after spotting the vehicle’s improperly tinted front windshield.

    During the traffic stop, police say they found a firearm and what appeared to be illegal drugs in the vehicle.

    The driver was taken into custody and charged with multiple firearms violations and drug possession charges. Police have not yet released the suspect’s name pending formal processing.

    The incident remains under investigation by Newark Police. Additional details about the specific charges and court proceedings are expected to be released following the suspect’s arraignment.

  • Delaware Governor Creates New Task Force to Protect Election Integrity

    Delaware Governor Creates New Task Force to Protect Election Integrity

    DOVER — Delaware Governor Matt Meyer has created a new task force dedicated to protecting the integrity of elections throughout the First State by signing Executive Order 19.

    The newly formed Delaware Task Force on Free, Fair, and Secure Elections represents a coordinated initiative designed to strengthen election security measures, boost citizen confidence in how Delaware conducts its elections, and shield the state from any unconstitutional federal intervention.

    “The U.S. Constitution is clear: elections are run by the states, not the federal government,” Meyer stated. “That’s a responsibility we take seriously.”

    The executive order establishes a framework for maintaining Delaware’s electoral processes under state control while ensuring voters can trust in the security and fairness of their elections.

  • Marine Weather Outlook Available for Local Waters

    Marine Weather Outlook Available for Local Waters

    Weather forecasters have issued marine conditions information for regional waterways, providing essential details for those planning water-based activities.

    The National Weather Service marine outlook covers current and expected conditions that affect boating, fishing, and other maritime operations in the area.

    Mariners and recreational boaters are encouraged to check current marine forecasts before heading out on the water to ensure safe conditions for their planned activities.

  • Padres Add Pitcher Lucas Giolito to Strengthen Injury-Hit Rotation

    Padres Add Pitcher Lucas Giolito to Strengthen Injury-Hit Rotation

    The San Diego Padres have brought aboard seasoned pitcher Lucas Giolito, adding the premier free agent starter available to help their injury-riddled pitching staff as the team continues its hot start to the season.

    San Diego revealed the one-year contract agreement with Giolito on Wednesday, which includes a team option for 2027. The club did not reveal monetary details of the arrangement.

    The 31-year-old California native posted a 10-4 record with a 3.41 earned run average across 26 starts for Boston last season, demonstrating a strong comeback following his absence from the entire 2024 campaign due to right elbow surgery that repaired his ulnar collateral ligament with an internal brace procedure in March.

    Throughout nine major league seasons with Washington, Chicago White Sox, Los Angeles Angels and Cleveland, Giolito has compiled a 71-66 record with a 4.30 ERA and 1.26 WHIP.

    The right-hander has demonstrated consistency and reliability throughout most of his professional tenure, earning All-Star recognition in 2019 and delivering a no-hitter in 2020. Even with his injury-shortened season, he remains among the top five American League hurlers from 2018-25 in innings thrown (1,092), strikeouts (1,153), victories (68) and complete games (5).

    However, Giolito remained unsigned nearly a full month into the current season before joining the Padres, who have excelled on the mound despite significant rotation disruptions and injury concerns.

    Starting pitcher Nick Pivetta landed on the disabled list last week with a right elbow flexor strain that may sideline him for several months, while Joe Musgrove has yet to take the mound this year due to a prolonged recovery from Tommy John surgery. Yu Darvish is already finished for the season with an elbow problem, and Dylan Cease departed last fall after signing a $210 million free-agent contract with Toronto.

    Despite these setbacks, the Padres maintain the majors’ second-best team ERA at 3.22 following Tuesday night’s 1-0 victory over Colorado, marking their 11th win in 12 contests. San Diego’s 16-7 record matches the defending champion Los Angeles Dodgers for baseball’s best mark.

    General manager A.J. Preller managed to accommodate Giolito within his financial constraints while the franchise undergoes ownership changes. The family of deceased Padres owner Peter Seidler is close to completing a sale to billionaire Jose E. Feliciano and his wife, Kwanza Jones.

    Giolito will immediately join a rotation currently featuring Michael King, Randy Vásquez, Germán Márquez and former Dodgers ace Walker Buehler. Right-hander Matt Waldron made a start following Pivetta’s injury but performed poorly in a defeat to the Angels.

    Giolito had signed a $38.5 million, two-year agreement with Boston in January 2024. He aims to continue his impressive performance with the Red Sox from 2025, when he went 9-1 with a 2.26 ERA over 15 starts between June 10 and August 31 after a sluggish beginning. Opposing batters managed just .194 (25 for 129) against his changeup and .200 (3 for 15) against his curveball.

    Boston excluded him from their postseason roster after he experienced elbow discomfort in mid-September, though no structural damage was found — which he described as “a small relief in a very unfortunate situation.”

    “As it was described to me in layman’s terms, my flexor is very irritated and at this point it’s hard for me to describe,” Giolito explained following Game 1 of Boston’s AL Wild Card Series against the New York Yankees. “It’s like weird stuff going on with my bone. It’s one of those things I was told you got to stop throwing and let it calm down.”

    Giolito has not appeared in playoff action since 2021, when he made his second career postseason appearance for the White Sox.

    San Diego moved right-hander Bryan Hoeing to the 60-day disabled list to create roster space for Giolito on the 40-man squad.

  • Former Moldovan Opposition Leader Sentenced to 19 Years in $1B Bank Fraud

    Former Moldovan Opposition Leader Sentenced to 19 Years in $1B Bank Fraud

    A former opposition politician and wealthy businessman from Moldova received a 19-year prison sentence Wednesday for his involvement in a massive banking scandal that drained $1 billion from the Eastern European nation’s financial institutions over ten years ago.

    Vladimir Plahotniuc, age 60, was found guilty by the Buiucani District Court in Moldova’s capital city of Chisinau on multiple criminal charges including operating a criminal enterprise, financial fraud, and laundering money.

    The case centers on the theft of $1 billion from three Moldovan banking institutions in 2014. This enormous sum represented roughly one-eighth of Moldova’s entire yearly economic output at that time, throwing the impoverished nation into severe crisis. According to prosecutors, Plahotniuc personally obtained $39 million plus 3.5 million euros from the stolen money through businesses operated by fellow Moldovan oligarch Ilan Shor.

    Case prosecutor Alexandru Cernei informed media representatives that prosecutors had requested the maximum 25-year sentence and that the government plans to pursue $60 million in financial damages.

    Plahotniuc was absent from Wednesday’s court proceedings and has consistently maintained his innocence, claiming the charges are driven by political motives.

    Defense attorney Lucian Rogac denounced the court’s ruling as “unlawful” and announced plans to file an appeal.

    “We didn’t expect a different ruling, given that the entire process was marred by serious violations,” he said.

    The convicted oligarch escaped to the United States in June 2019 following his unsuccessful attempt to establish a government coalition with his Democratic Party. Greek authorities arrested him in July of last year, and he was sent back to Moldova in September, where he remained in custody awaiting trial.

    “For years, Plahotniuc evaded justice while controlling the system itself,” Iulian Groza, executive director of the Institute for European Policies and Reforms think tank, wrote on Facebook.

    “That a reformed court, with integrity-vetted judges, has now convicted him of running a criminal organization, fraud, and money laundering is a milestone — and proof that judicial reform works,” Groza said. “The next test is the appeal.”

    The United States designated Plahotniuc as persona non grata in 2020, marking him as an unwelcome individual, and his location remained unknown for several years.

    U.S. State Department officials placed the influential businessman and former politician on their sanctions roster in 2022 due to alleged corrupt activities. These accusations included manipulating the nation’s law enforcement agencies to pursue political opponents and business competitors, as well as interfering with Moldova’s electoral processes.

    British authorities also sanctioned him in 2022, prohibiting his entry into the country and freezing his financial assets throughout the United Kingdom and its territories.

    Moldova sits between war-affected Ukraine and Romania, which belongs to both the European Union and NATO. The nation gained independence from the Soviet Union in 1991 and has recently aligned itself with Western nations, creating tension between Russian and European influences in the region.

  • Maryland Approves $1.66M for Park Improvements Across Four Counties

    Maryland Approves $1.66M for Park Improvements Across Four Counties

    State officials have given the green light to more than $1.66 million in funding from Maryland’s Department of Natural Resources to help local communities enhance their recreational facilities across four counties: Allegany, Caroline, Frederick, and Prince George’s.

    The Board of Public Works also authorized an additional $340,000 through the Program Open Space – Stateside initiative to purchase approximately 137 acres of property next to Potomac-Garrett State Forest in Garrett County. This land acquisition will expand opportunities for public outdoor activities such as hunting, hiking, and observing wildlife.

    Several specific improvement projects received Program Open Space – Local funding approval:

    • Allegany County plans to enhance the swimming pool and baseball field facilities at Frostburg Community Park.

    • Caroline County will build a brand new bicycle pump track at North County Regional Park.

    • Frederick County will advance its Kim Weddle Park renovation by installing walkways, fencing, protective surfacing beneath swing sets, and new signage.

    • Prince George’s Equestrian Center will receive upgrades including audio equipment, outdoor arena and stable enhancements, a shade structure, scoreboard, and paved surfaces.

    Complete details about these funding decisions can be found in the Board of Public Works meeting agenda from April 22, 2026. The board consists of three members: Governor Wes Moore, Treasurer Dereck E. Davis, and Comptroller Brooke E. Lierman.

    The Program Open Space – Local initiative supports county and municipal governments in planning, purchasing, and developing recreational lands and facilities. Created in 1969 under the Department of Natural Resources, this program demonstrates Maryland’s ongoing dedication to environmental conservation while ensuring quality outdoor recreation access for residents. Property transfer taxes provide the program’s funding source.

    The Program Open Space – Stateside component focuses on protecting natural areas throughout Maryland for public recreation, watershed conservation, and wildlife habitat through land purchases and conservation easements. Properties acquired through this program become state parks, forests, and wildlife management areas under department oversight.

  • Kids Can Cast Lines at Delaware’s 40th Annual Youth Fishing Contest This Saturday

    Kids Can Cast Lines at Delaware’s 40th Annual Youth Fishing Contest This Saturday

    Young fishing enthusiasts throughout the First State will have the opportunity to participate in a milestone celebration this weekend as Delaware marks four decades of its popular Youth Fishing Tournament.

    The Delaware Natural Resources Police will organize the 40th edition of this beloved annual event on Saturday, June 6, welcoming participants from 10 a.m. until 1 p.m. at three designated freshwater locations across the state.

    Parents and guardians can bring their children to test their angling skills at any of the three participating venues: Blockhouse Pond located in Sussex County, the Akridge Scout Reservation Pond situated in Kent County, or Lums Pond in New Castle County.

    This longstanding tradition provides families with an excellent opportunity to introduce young people to the sport of fishing while enjoying Delaware’s natural outdoor recreational areas.

  • Gates Foundation Orders External Review of Jeffrey Epstein Connections

    Gates Foundation Orders External Review of Jeffrey Epstein Connections

    NEW YORK — The Gates Foundation announced Wednesday it has launched an independent investigation into its historical connections with Jeffrey Epstein, the convicted sex offender, as Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates faces increased examination following the release of Justice Department records tied to the disgraced financier.

    During a February internal meeting at the influential charitable organization he co-founded with former wife Melinda French Gates, Bill Gates addressed his connection to Epstein in what sources described as a frank discussion. The external investigation represents the foundation’s most direct effort to confront relationships that have overshadowed its mission to prevent maternal and child mortality while combating major infectious diseases worldwide.

    “In March, with the support of our chair, Bill Gates, and our independent Governing Board members, Gates Foundation CEO Mark Suzman commissioned an external review to assess past foundation engagement with Epstein, and our current policies for vetting and developing new philanthropic partnerships,” the organization stated. The Wall Street Journal initially broke the story about an internal staff memo describing the investigation.

    The charitable organization has been experiencing significant transitions recently. In January, the Gates Foundation announced plans to limit operational expenses and gradually eliminate up to 500 jobs — approximately 20% of its workforce — by 2030. This restructuring follows last year’s decision to dissolve the foundation by 2045, sooner than originally planned.

    Released Justice Department records contain email communications between Gates and Epstein discussing charitable initiatives, scheduled meeting entries, and photographs showing Gates at gatherings where both men were present. Gates has faced no criminal allegations related to his association with Epstein, maintains he was unaware of Epstein’s illegal activities, and insists their interactions focused solely on philanthropic matters.

    In a February statement, the foundation admitted that “a small number” of staff members engaged with Epstein due to his “claims that he could mobilize significant philanthropic resources for global health and development.” However, no joint fund was established and the foundation transferred no money to Epstein, according to their earlier announcement.

    “The foundation regrets having any employees interact with Epstein in any way,” their statement declared.

    Warren Buffett, one of the foundation’s longest-standing and most significant supporters, is monitoring the document releases carefully. The investor, who contributes a portion of his yearly Berkshire Hathaway stock to the nonprofit, told CNBC’s “Squawk Box” last month that clearly “there was a lot I didn’t know.”

    After stepping down as foundation trustee in 2021, Buffett has maintained his annual donations typically made at the end of June. However, he indicated he will “wait and see what unfolds” regarding the Justice Department documents and congressional investigations into their contents. He pointed out the foundation maintains substantial reserves with an $86 billion endowment and noted Gates possesses “plenty of his own money.”

    “So, in any event, I’ll just wait and see. And there’s three and a half million, or whatever it is pages – I mean, it is astounding,” Buffett commented about the Epstein documentation.

    A Gates Foundation representative characterized Buffett as “an extraordinarily generous partner” spanning nearly twenty years in Wednesday’s statement to the Associated Press.

    “We are deeply grateful for his support, which has enabled us to accelerate progress on some of the world’s toughest challenges that would not otherwise have been possible,” the spokesperson stated.

    The Gates Foundation anticipates its board and leadership will receive findings from the Epstein investigation this summer. The identity of the third-party investigators remains undisclosed.

  • Private Equity Giant Loses $5.1B as Software Company Heads to Lenders

    Private Equity Giant Loses $5.1B as Software Company Heads to Lenders

    A major private equity firm is preparing to surrender a troubled software company to its lenders following extended financial restructuring discussions, according to an insider with knowledge of the negotiations.

    Thoma Bravo is close to finalizing a deal that would transfer control of Medallia Inc. to the company’s creditors, sources report. This transaction would eliminate $5.1 billion in equity investments made by Thoma Bravo and its partner investors, who acquired the customer service software business for $6.4 billion three years ago.

    The software company has faced significant financial challenges in recent months, burdened by approximately $3 billion in outstanding debt owed to major financial institutions including Blackstone, KKR, and Apollo.

    When contacted for comment, representatives from Thoma Bravo and KKR declined to provide statements. Apollo and Medallia did not respond to immediate requests for comment regarding the pending agreement.

  • Iranian Leader Blames US Actions for Blocking Diplomatic Progress

    Iranian Leader Blames US Actions for Blocking Diplomatic Progress

    Iran’s President Masoud Pezeshkian pointed to American failures to honor agreements and the blocking of Iranian shipping facilities as primary barriers preventing sincere diplomatic discussions, according to statements made Wednesday.

    Pezeshkian criticized what he called inconsistent American policies, stating: “[The] world sees your endless hypocritical rhetoric and contradiction between claims and actions.” His remarks followed President Donald Trump’s announcement of extending a ceasefire by one day.

    The Iranian leader’s comments highlight ongoing tensions between the two nations as diplomatic efforts continue to face significant challenges.

  • Man in Critical Condition After Newark Area Shooting

    Man in Critical Condition After Newark Area Shooting

    New Castle County Police are investigating after a man walked into Christiana Hospital with a gunshot wound Monday afternoon.

    The incident unfolded around 2:50 p.m. on April 20, 2026, when law enforcement was called to the hospital regarding a shooting victim who had arrived seeking treatment.

    When officers arrived at the medical facility, they found a 30-year-old man who had been shot in the upper body. Medical staff reported the victim was listed in critical condition.

    The shooting is believed to have occurred in the Concord Bridge Place area of Newark, according to authorities with the New Castle County Division of Police.

    Investigators are working to determine the circumstances surrounding the shooting and are asking anyone with information to come forward.

  • Brazilian President Uses Daily Workouts to Address Age Concerns at 80

    Brazilian President Uses Daily Workouts to Address Age Concerns at 80

    SAO PAULO (AP) — Daily gym sessions and workout videos are taking center stage over traditional campaign appearances and media interviews.

    At 80 years old, Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva is making physical fitness a cornerstone of his reelection campaign, with exercise routines that some observers say generate more enthusiasm than his political platform.

    Although Brazilian voters remain split on whether Lula should pursue an unprecedented fourth non-consecutive presidential term, most agree his dedication to daily treadmill sessions sets a positive example.

    “He is a bit too old to campaign again. We’d better have someone else running. But his workouts are indeed a good example for people like me,” said Marcela Peres, 63, as she exercised in a hotel gym in Brasilia on Wednesday.

    Lula’s emphasis on demonstrating physical vigor has prompted his primary opponent, Sen. Flávio Bolsonaro, son of former President Jair Bolsonaro, to showcase his own athletic abilities.

    With some voters worried that Lula could follow the same trajectory as former U.S. President Joe Biden, who stepped away from the 2024 presidential race due to age and health concerns, the Brazilian leader is using fitness displays to convince supporters to back him once more.

    “One of these idiots said it was not me, that it was a clone,” Lula said in March, days after his wife, Rosângela da Silva, posted a video of his workout routine. “Go to the gym. Get ready. Drink less and work to see what happens. I want to live 120 years.”

    During his initial two presidential terms, Lula regularly participated in soccer games, continued exercising throughout his 580-day imprisonment, and promoted physical activity when he campaigned in 2022 to defeat then-incumbent Bolsonaro, a former military officer with health issues.

    Should Lula succeed in October’s election, he would surpass his own milestone as Brazil’s oldest elected president.

    His primary challenger is nearly half his age.

    The 45-year-old Bolsonaro recently ridiculed Lula by likening him to an aging Chevrolet Opala that is “all backward” and “drinks a lot (of fuel).”

    Lula, who has been on virtually every presidential ballot since Brazil’s military dictatorship ended in 1985, dismissed the criticism by calling himself a “turbo car” instead.

    “He is doing this to steer away from the Joe Biden effect,” said Carlos Melo, a political science professor at Insper university in Sao Paulo. “Flávio Bolsonaro is trying to say he is actually the young one. This is a game of image.”

    The younger Bolsonaro is also demonstrating his physical condition by posting videos of himself jogging to meetings and performing dance moves on stage.

    This aspect of his public persona only emerged in December, when his father designated him as the presidential candidate while incarcerated in the capital, Brasilia, where he was serving a 27-year sentence for orchestrating a coup attempt before being transferred to house arrest.

    Political consultant Felipe Soutello, who has managed multiple Brazilian political campaigns, explained that modern electoral bids require candidates to appear dynamic and energetic, regardless of their age.

    “The opposition will use a certain ageism, a little prejudice against older generations, as a tool to hurt the president’s performance,” Soutello said.

    However, he pointed out that Brazil is experiencing a demographic transformation, with voters over 60 comprising one-quarter of the electorate. “They have more political weight than the young people,” he said.

    According to research firm Nexus, citing data from Brazil’s supreme electoral court, the number of eligible Brazilian voters above 60 increased from 20.8 million in 2010 to 36.2 million in March of this year.

    Musician Antonio Moreira, 50, enjoys beach workouts in Rio de Janeiro, displaying his physique, tan, and tattoos. He represents a small but crucial demographic that could determine the election outcome: voters who remain undecided between Lula and Bolsonaro.

    In the previous election, Lula prevailed with only 50.9% of votes, marking the closest margin in Brazilian electoral history.

    “Nobody wants to vote for a president that is stumbling,” Moreira said, adding that Lula’s workouts also encourage older people to stay active.

    Regarding Bolsonaro’s dance performances, Moreira noted that “a little dance can define an entire political career” in Brazil. But that’s not enough.

    “It is okay to do it as they do to seek for votes, but to reach a different kind of voter there needs to be more real proposals, right?”

  • Kansas City Royals Plan $1.9B Downtown Stadium in Major Development Deal

    Kansas City Royals Plan $1.9B Downtown Stadium in Major Development Deal

    KANSAS CITY, Mo. — The Kansas City Royals announced Wednesday they will abandon their current home at Kauffman Stadium in favor of a brand-new downtown ballpark, teaming up with Hallmark Cards for an ambitious $3 billion development project.

    Team owner John Sherman joined Hallmark chairman Don Hall Jr., Missouri Governor Mike Kehoe, and Kansas City Mayor Quinton Lucas at Hallmark’s headquarters to unveil the massive undertaking that will transform the Crown Center district.

    Though the complete master plan remains in development, Sherman revealed the $1.9 billion stadium will begin construction next year at the heart of Crown Center, serving as the focal point of an 85-acre development’s initial phase. Private investors will provide two-thirds of the financing, with the remaining third coming from public partners, including state funds designated for stadium construction.

    “This is a partnership between two treasured Kansas City institutions,” Sherman stated. “We are committed to creating a vision which honors our history, the rich past of both organizations, while reinvigorating and reimagining what our future can be together.”

    The revelation followed Kansas City officials’ recent approval of an ordinance allowing City Manager Mario Vasquez to negotiate a $600 million agreement supporting the Royals’ downtown relocation. Many expected the venue would occupy Washington Square Park near Union Station, but the stadium will actually sit just south of that location, incorporating the park into the broader development.

    Hallmark plans to construct new corporate headquarters within the area, which connects via streetcar to the Power & Light District anchored by T-Mobile Center. That downtown Kansas City skyline will create the scenic backdrop beyond the stadium’s outfield walls.

    City leaders emphasized the area’s existing public parking availability and easy highway access for traffic management.

    Missouri’s financial contribution stems from legislation passed last year authorizing bonds covering up to half the cost of new or renovated state stadiums, plus $50 million in tax credits per facility and additional local government assistance.

    “We think it’s a great investment for our Missouri taxpayers, because this does not affect existing programs,” Kehoe explained. “The ripple effect from this facility will truly be far-reaching into rural Missouri and other parts of the state.”

    The Royals have maintained they would vacate Kauffman Stadium when their Truman Sports Complex lease ends in 2031, with Sherman pursuing a downtown ballpark replacement since acquiring the team in 2019.

    However, Wednesday’s announcement followed numerous obstacles and setbacks.

    The most significant hurdle occurred in April 2024, when the Chiefs partnered with the Royals on a proposal to renovate Arrowhead Stadium while replacing Kauffman Stadium. The plan required extending a sales tax funding stadium maintenance, but Jackson County, Missouri voters decisively rejected the measure, forcing both franchises to pursue separate solutions.

    Kansas lawmakers aggressively courted the Chiefs, approving $2.4 billion in bonds last December to fund 60% of a new $3 billion domed stadium in Kansas City, Kansas. The NFL team ultimately chose to relocate across state lines, also planning a new training facility in nearby Olathe, Kansas.

    Kansas officials briefly showed interest in the Royals as well, though their pursuit of the MLB team remained halfhearted.

    The Royals considered multiple locations in recent months, ultimately declining an Overland Park, Kansas option and missing a deadline for a site north of downtown across the Missouri River in Clay County, Missouri.

    Economic experts have consistently determined that stadium subsidies don’t justify their community costs, as these facilities typically redirect economic activity from other local areas rather than growing the overall economy. Despite this, states and cities regularly fund stadium renovations or new construction — 49 of 60 venues used by MLB or NFL teams are publicly owned or built on public property.

    Sherman has referenced Truist Park in Atlanta as a model for Kansas City’s potential.

    That stadium represented a public-private partnership where the Cobb-Marietta Coliseum & Exhibit Hall Authority issued up to $397 million in bonds, the county generated additional millions through transportation taxes, and businesses contributed cash. The Braves funded the remaining costs for both the park and The Battery mixed-use development, totaling over $1.1 billion.

    “There are many great ballpark neighborhoods in Major League Baseball,” Sherman noted, “but this is a bigger project with more land in downtown and in the heart of the city. We are bringing a modern, state-of-the-art ballpark experience to our fans, closer to our public transportation and where more people work and live.”

  • Dairy Industry Pushes for Stricter Plant-Based Product Labeling Rules

    Dairy Industry Pushes for Stricter Plant-Based Product Labeling Rules

    A major dairy industry organization is throwing its support behind new federal legislation aimed at forcing stricter labeling rules for plant-based alternatives that use traditional dairy names.

    The National Milk Producers Federation issued a statement backing the recently reintroduced DAIRY PRIDE Act, with President and CEO Gregg Doud criticizing federal regulators for allowing what he calls misleading marketing practices.

    “FDA’s continued failure to enforce its own rules on the proper labeling of plant-based alternative products is a public health problem, plain and simple,” Doud stated. He emphasized that authentic dairy provides 13 vital nutrients, highlighting calcium, potassium, and vitamin D as particularly important for public health.

    According to Doud, plant-based products that don’t match dairy’s nutritional profile have been permitted to suggest they’re equivalent to genuine dairy items, creating confusion among shoppers.

    The proposed legislation would require the Food and Drug Administration to uphold existing dairy labeling standards that give specific meaning to terms like “milk,” “cheese,” and “yogurt.” These standards were originally created to ensure honest marketing and consumer protection.

    “The DAIRY PRIDE Act directs FDA to enforce dairy standards of identity, which were developed to promote honesty and protect consumers,” Doud explained, arguing that current enforcement gaps allow plant-based companies to capitalize on consumer expectations while offering nutritionally different products.

    “It’s high time FDA makes it easier for consumers to navigate the choices they face in the grocery aisles; the DAIRY PRIDE Act is an important step in the right direction. Dairy farmers and their cooperatives thank Reps. John Joyce and Josh Riley for their bipartisan leadership in finding solutions through this critical legislation,” he added.

    Representatives John Joyce, a Pennsylvania Republican, and Josh Riley, a New York Democrat, reintroduced the bipartisan measure in the House of Representatives. The bill would classify food products making false claims about milk content as “misbranded” and mandate that the FDA provide enforcement guidance within 90 days for nationwide action against improperly labeled imitation dairy items.

  • UD’s Areephun Captures Third Conference USA Golf Honor This Season

    UD’s Areephun Captures Third Conference USA Golf Honor This Season

    A University of Delaware junior has once again claimed top honors in Conference USA men’s golf competition. Arsit Areephun received his third Conference USA Men’s Golfer of the Week recognition this season, the league announced Wednesday from Dallas.

    This latest accolade brings Areephun’s career total to five weekly honors from the conference. The award acknowledges his stellar play during the Rutherford Intercollegiate tournament, which marked the conclusion of the regular season for the Blue Hens golf program.

    Areephun’s consistent excellence throughout the season has made him a standout performer for Delaware’s men’s golf team as they prepare for postseason competition.

  • Georgia Congressman David Scott Dies at 80 While Running for 13th Term

    Georgia Congressman David Scott Dies at 80 While Running for 13th Term

    ATLANTA — Georgia Democratic Congressman David Scott has passed away at the age of 80 while in the midst of campaigning for what would have been his 13th term in the U.S. House of Representatives.

    The veteran lawmaker held the position of ranking Democrat on the House Agriculture Committee and previously made history as the committee’s first African American chairman, even though his district encompassed the Atlanta metropolitan area rather than rural farmland. Scott became a key Democratic voice on agricultural assistance programs and consumer food aid initiatives, while also serving as a notable member of the moderate Blue Dog Coalition.

    In recent years, the congressman encountered criticism and questions about his ability to serve effectively due to health issues, leading to primary election challenges in 2024 and another brewing contest at the time of his passing.

    Congressional Democratic leaders offered tributes to Scott following news of his death.

    House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries expressed his sorrow to reporters, saying, “The news of Congressman Scott’s passing is deeply sad.”

    Jeffries continued his remarks by highlighting Scott’s achievements: “David Scott was a trailblazer who served district that he represented admirably, rose up from humble beginnings to become the first African American ever to chair the House Ag Committee. He cared about the people that he represented. He was fiercely committed to getting things done for the people of the great state of Georgia, and he’ll be deeply missed.”

    The representative had maintained a limited presence during the 2026 campaign season but had rejected calls for his retirement from office.

    In 2024, Scott had responded to retirement pressure by stating, “Thank God I’m in good health, moving and doing the people’s work.”

    Scott’s passing creates a slightly larger Republican advantage in the closely divided House of Representatives as the midterm election season intensifies.

  • Record Number of 4-Year-Olds Enrolled in State-Funded Preschool Programs

    Record Number of 4-Year-Olds Enrolled in State-Funded Preschool Programs

    WASHINGTON — State-funded preschool programs welcomed a record number of young learners last school year, with enrollment climbing to historic levels thanks to unprecedented government investment of $14.4 billion.

    According to a new study released Wednesday by the National Institute of Early Education Research, approximately 1.8 million children participated in state-funded preschool programs nationwide. This represents coverage for 37% of all 4-year-olds and roughly 10% of 3-year-olds across the country. The programs gained 44,000 new students compared to the previous year, though researchers noted this growth was slower than earlier increases and highlighted significant disparities between different states.

    “If providing high-quality preschool education to all 3- and 4-year-olds were a race,” the authors wrote, “some states are nearing the finish line, others have stumbled and fallen behind, and a few have yet to leave the starting line.”

    California accounted for more than half of the national enrollment increase, adding approximately 25,000 students through its expanded “transitional kindergarten” or “TK” initiative. This year, the state extended eligibility to all 4-year-olds in the program. However, the rapid expansion came with challenges. While the research institute established 10 quality standards covering areas like teacher preparation, classroom size, and educational content, California only satisfied two of these criteria during the most recent school year. Additionally, private preschool operators express concern that the influx of children into public programs could severely impact their operations.

    “Universal TK … is a real win, but it’s also just the start of the work and not the end of it,” said Jessica Sawko of Children Now, which advocates on early childhood issues in California. She noted that the state will hit two more quality benchmarks in next year’s report, by lowering its student-teacher ratio to 10-to-1 and by requiring lead teachers to have early education training.

    The findings demonstrate the challenging balance states must strike when rapidly expanding programs or operating with constrained budgets. Hawaii exemplifies this tension as one of only six states meeting all quality standards established by the institute, yet its program reaches just 10% of eligible 4-year-olds.

    Research continues to demonstrate that quality early childhood education creates lasting benefits, helping children succeed in kindergarten, complete high school, and secure employment as adults. Educational experts increasingly view preschool as crucial preparation, as kindergarten teachers now expect incoming students to arrive with foundational skills.

    “We have a lot of kids who still do not fulfill their potential,” said Steven Barnett, founder and director of the early education institute. “We have evidence — very strong evidence — that preschool programs substantially improved the foundation for later success.”

    Many states also recognize that free prekindergarten programs can boost the broader economy by enabling parents to return to work while private childcare becomes increasingly expensive.

    Heather Sufuentes observed these benefits firsthand as principal of Parkview Elementary in Chico, California, when the school launched its transitional kindergarten program. Students who completed the play-based, full-day program demonstrated greater confidence and frequently stepped into leadership roles in their classes.

    “They’re well prepared to transition into that big elementary school setting,” said Sufuentes, now director of elementary education for Chico Unified School District. Chico has more than doubled the number of TK seats it offers since 2022.

    Marisol Márquez, a secretary who works for the state, sends her daughter to transitional kindergarten at 1st Street Elementary in Los Angeles. She had been sending her for free to a learning center underwritten by COVID-19 relief funding. But she would have had to start paying tuition this year, and she’s not sure how she and her husband, a UPS driver, would have made it work. She was elated to hear 1st Street Elementary was offering free transitional kindergarten.

    Teachers at the school quickly recognized her daughter’s academic abilities and began including her in kindergarten mathematics and reading instruction.

    “If it hadn’t been for this program, we would have never found that out,” Márquez said.

    While expectations for 5-year-olds have increased, no state requires preschool attendance, and only certain cities and states provide universal access for 4-year-olds. Program availability varies dramatically across the country. Families in Wyoming, which offers no state-funded preschool, could relocate to Colorado and access free part-time preschool for their 4-year-old. Washington D.C. provides two complete years of prekindergarten even for wealthy families, while nearby Virginia operates a much smaller program.

    These geographic disparities can worsen existing inequalities. Affluent families typically can afford private preschool regardless of state offerings. Private childcare centers using preschool curricula charged an average of more than $12,000 annually for 4-year-olds in 2024, according to Child Care Aware of America.

    Families unable to pay private tuition face limited alternatives. State-funded programs frequently maintain waiting lists.

    Low-income families may qualify for programs like Head Start, which serves America’s most disadvantaged children. However, Head Start enrollment is declining partly due to staffing shortages. These families might also receive state or federal childcare subsidies for private preschool, but those programs also have expanding waiting lists.

    Federal funding for early education expansion remains limited and decreasing. Recently, President Donald Trump said the federal government couldn’t afford to support child care while it was waging a war with Iran.

    “We’re fighting wars. We can’t take care of day care,” Trump said. States, he added, “should pay for it. … They’ll have to raise their taxes.”

    The distribution of high-quality public preschool programs might surprise political observers. Republican-controlled states pioneered universal prekindergarten, with Oklahoma launching its program in the late 1990s. Alabama and West Virginia also operate highly-rated preschool-for-all initiatives. Wealthier Democratic states have moved more slowly, though many liberal cities have advanced their own programs. New York state actually lost enrollment last year, even as New York City, which already provides universal prekindergarten, pursues plans for free childcare for younger children.

    Georgia, under Republican leadership, became the first state to achieve universal preschool while meeting all quality standards set by the National Institute of Early Education Research.

    Rebecca Ellis’s son John Patrick, 5, attends the private Capitol Hill Child Enrichment Center in Atlanta free of charge, thanks to the state’s preschool-for-all program. She said it saved her family a huge amount of money, and she is impressed by how much her son has grown socially and emotionally.

    “They focus so much on just helping kids learn how to calm down, to make friends, to regulate their feelings, to solve problems,” Ellis said.

    John Patrick and her older son, who attended the same preschool, have even given their parents advice. When they become agitated, the children urge them to take deep breaths.

  • Thief Gets 3 Years for Stealing Homeland Security Secretary’s Purse in DC

    Thief Gets 3 Years for Stealing Homeland Security Secretary’s Purse in DC

    WASHINGTON — A Chilean national received a three-year prison term Wednesday for taking then-Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem’s designer handbag during a theft spree across Washington, D.C.

    According to federal prosecutors, Mario Bustamante Leiva was unaware of Noem’s identity when he snatched her Gucci purse from beneath a restaurant table in April 2025. Noem was dining with family members while under Secret Service protection at the time. The stolen bag contained credit cards and approximately $3,000 cash, which officers later found in Leiva’s motel room.

    U.S. District Judge Trevor McFadden handed down the sentence to the 50-year-old, who now faces removal from the country following his incarceration.

    “Bustamante Leiva came to Washington illegally to prey on citizens of the district,” stated U.S. attorney for the District of Columbia Jeanine Pirro. “His pattern of theft ends here.”

    In a previous statement, Noem described Bustamante Leiva as “a career criminal who has been in our country illegally for years.” Court documents identify the former secretary only by her initials.

    The defendant entered guilty pleas in November to three wire fraud counts and one first-degree theft charge. Prosecutors say he also victimized two additional people, stealing from them and making unauthorized purchases with their payment cards.

    A co-defendant, Cristian Montecino-Sananza, received 13 months behind bars in March for participating in one of the other robberies.

    Law enforcement officials traced Bustamante Leiva to the crimes after he purchased items using a stolen gift card.

  • Mexico President Considers Sanctions After CIA Agents Die in Border State

    Mexico President Considers Sanctions After CIA Agents Die in Border State

    MEXICO CITY — Mexico’s President Claudia Sheinbaum announced Wednesday she may impose sanctions on Chihuahua state officials for permitting CIA operatives to join a drug laboratory destruction mission without getting approval from Mexico’s central government.

    The president’s remarks followed several days of conflicting statements from various officials regarding the weekend deaths of two American agents in a vehicle accident. The agents were traveling back from dismantling an illegal drug manufacturing facility in northern Mexico when the fatal crash occurred. A U.S. official and two sources with knowledge of intelligence operations confirmed Tuesday that the CIA was involved in the mission.

    “There cannot be agents from any U.S. government institution operating in the Mexican field,” the president stated during her morning news briefing. She noted that such activities are not part of the current security protocols or the formal understanding between the two nations.

    The fatal accident also claimed the lives of two Mexican law enforcement officers. Mexican officials reported the crash happened as their convoy returned from destroying criminal organizations’ drug production sites. Conflicting public statements from American and Mexican authorities have highlighted increased U.S. participation in regional security missions, according to experts.

    During Wednesday’s briefing, Sheinbaum confirmed that Mexico’s military took part in the raid, explaining this falls within their authority to assist individual states. She stressed, however, that federal officials had no knowledge of American agents being present during the operation.

    The president dismissed suggestions that this incident represents a new approach by the Trump administration, which has pressed Mexico to intensify its anti-cartel efforts.

    Sheinbaum revealed she has written to the U.S. ambassador in Mexico demanding complete details about the incident. She also plans to meet with Chihuahua Governor Maru Campos. “It is very important that something like this not be allowed to go unaddressed,” she said.

    President Donald Trump has frequently suggested direct action against Mexican drug cartels, an approach Sheinbaum has called “unnecessary.”

  • Massive Ice Chunks Smash Through Michigan Homes During Severe Flooding

    Massive Ice Chunks Smash Through Michigan Homes During Severe Flooding

    Massive ice slabs have crashed through homes in northeastern Michigan’s Cheboygan County, where spring storms and melting snow have created catastrophic flooding conditions that forced residents to evacuate.

    Social media posts from Wednesday revealed the devastating aftermath, with enormous ice chunks sitting inside living rooms after smashing through windows and doors. Properties throughout the area were submerged under several feet of murky floodwater.

    The combination of seasonal precipitation and thawing winter snow has caused waterways to surge beyond capacity, sending torrents through Cheboygan County communities before eventually reaching Lake Huron.

    According to a Facebook post from the Cheboygan County sheriff’s office last week, the flooding has been unprecedented. “Black Lake, Black River, Cheboygan River, Burt Lake, Mullett Lake, the Sturgeon River — and nearly every waterway in the county — have overflowed beyond their banks, swallowing docks, roads, yards, and in far too many cases, homes,” officials stated. “What should be familiar shorelines are now unrecognizable expanses of water.”

    Weekend evacuations were ordered for residents living on Black Lake’s western shore, the sheriff’s office confirmed.

    Christopher Narsesian, who documented the destruction with photos and video, described the ice formations as extraordinary. “These are ice sheets. They’re massive,” Narsesian explained. “They’re mini glaciers, if you will. They just run down everything in their path. Nothing can stop that kind of weight.”

    Emergency crews from state and county agencies are working around the clock to prevent ice and debris from blocking the Cheboygan Lock and Dam Complex, which must remain clear to allow water passage into Lake Huron.

    Patrick Bak, a National Weather Service meteorologist based in Gaylord, Michigan, explained that under typical conditions, lake ice simply breaks apart and melts in place. However, wind likely pushed the Black Lake ice toward shore, he noted.

    “The fact that the water was so high, the ice … had more room to travel,” Bak explained.

    Similar ice movement has been observed on nearby Mullett Lake, with both bodies of water feeding into the Cheboygan River system that flows through the Cheboygan Dam.

    Patrick Ertel, representing the Michigan Department of Natural Resources Incident Management Team, acknowledged the challenges. “We’ve managed a little bit of ice issues on Mullett Lake,” Ertel said.

    Emergency response efforts last week included installing additional pumps and reactivating an abandoned hydroelectric facility to boost water flow through the dam. Heavy machinery was also deployed to remove water retention gates.

    On April 9, a massive ice chunk severed the safety cable at the Cheboygan Lock and Dam Complex, forcing natural resources officials to shut down access points both upstream and downstream from the facility.

    “We can’t have large chunks of ice flowing down blocking up the gates,” Ertel explained. “Two marine vessels are kind of breaking up the chunks … on the Cheboygan River. The more water we can safely pass at the Cheboygan Dam, the faster we can bring relief to Mullet Lake. It’s going as fast as it can. It is purely driven by gravity.”

    The smaller Alverno Dam sits between Black Lake and the Cheboygan River system.

    “Ice from Black Lake is not going to make it down to the Cheboygan River. It will be held up,” Ertel noted.

    Governor Gretchen Whitmer has issued emergency declarations for Cheboygan and more than 30 additional Michigan counties affected by this month’s flooding and severe weather events.

    Narsesian, a Cheboygan area resident who spent his childhood near Black Lake, said massive ice slabs spanning several miles continue drifting across the water. He described the ice as “smashing into homes and taking them out, just leveling them,” with some chunks reaching rooftop height.

    “We’ve never seen it that high,” Narsesian said. “Typically, the ice would just come over the break walls in front of houses, like a couple of feet. People’s homes don’t typically flood. The ice just melts.”

    While water levels are beginning to drop, Narsesian said conditions remain dangerous with significant ice still present.

    “As long as the wind doesn’t pick up and move that around again, we should be OK,” he said. “If that ice does come back, it’s going to do more damage.”

    The long-term recovery concerns Narsesian most, particularly in a tight-knit community where “it’s all friends and family” and “everybody knows everyone.”

    “Most people don’t have any help — coverage,” he added. “Flood insurance was never necessary. No one’s ever seen this here. It’s a lot.”

  • Beauty Giant L’Oreal Reports Strong First Quarter Growth Despite Mideast Challenges

    Beauty Giant L’Oreal Reports Strong First Quarter Growth Despite Mideast Challenges

    French cosmetics giant L’Oreal announced Wednesday that its first-quarter revenue jumped 6.7% as consumers flocked to premium hair care products and fragrances, with particularly strong performance in North America and developing markets helping to counterbalance sluggish sales in the Middle East.

    The company behind popular brands like Kerastase shampoo and YSL Libre perfume reported quarterly revenue of 12.2 billion euros ($14.32 billion) for the period ending in March. The growth figure reflects adjustments made for inventory issues from both this year and last year’s first quarter, related to an ongoing technology system upgrade.

    RBC analysts praised the results, stating “L’Oreal has returned to form,” highlighting the company’s solid fundamental growth and improved performance compared to the previous quarter.

    As the world’s leading beauty company, L’Oreal typically surpasses broader industry performance by utilizing its diverse product range – from affordable L’Oreal Paris cosmetics to luxury fragrances and dermatologist-recommended skincare – to capitalize on changing consumer preferences.

    The company acknowledged that Middle Eastern demand has suffered due to the U.S.-Israeli conflict with Iran, with particular impact in the UAE. However, this was offset by double-digit expansion in other developing regions and a 7.6% sales increase in North America, which ranks as the company’s second-largest market after Europe.

    Chief Executive Nicolas Hieronimus expressed confidence despite current challenges, saying in a statement: “Despite current geopolitical and macroeconomic uncertainties, we are optimistic about the outlook for the global beauty market.”

    This positive outlook contrasts with more reserved reports from other companies worried about Middle Eastern conflict impacts. Luxury conglomerates LVMH, Hermes and Kering all attributed disappointing first-quarter results to regional tensions, while businesses across various industries have cited war-related cost increases, supply chain disruptions and weakened consumer confidence as concerns for future performance.

    Barclays analysts noted in an April 17 research report that “L’Oreal screens as a relative winner thanks to its strong exposure to mass beauty, where products remain affordable and consumers can trade down within the portfolio.”

    The analysts estimated that Middle Eastern markets represent only 2%-3% of L’Oreal’s total revenue, including airport and travel retail sales.

    The company reported that its broader region encompassing South Asia, the Middle East and Africa – which accounted for 9% of total sales last year – achieved 15% growth, while European sales increased 5.5%.

    L’Oreal also noted that Chinese sales expanded by mid-to-high single digits, boosted by strong luxury product performance.

  • Nigerian Ex-Officials Deny Coup Plot Charges in Abuja Court

    Nigerian Ex-Officials Deny Coup Plot Charges in Abuja Court

    Six former Nigerian security officials entered not guilty pleas in an Abuja federal court Wednesday after being accused of conspiring to violently remove President Bola Tinubu from power last year.

    The defendants face 13 criminal counts including treason, terrorism, and financing terrorist activities. Among those charged is a retired army major-general, while a seventh defendant – a former state governor – has not been apprehended.

    Federal Judge Joyce Abdulmalik postponed proceedings until April 27 following the defendants’ denial of all charges during their court appearance.

    Nigeria’s Attorney-General and Justice Minister Lateef Fagbemi requested expedited proceedings due to the serious nature of the allegations. Judge Abdulmalik approved the request immediately after the defendants entered their pleas.

    When defense attorneys attempted to request bail orally, the judge rejected their approach and directed them to submit written bail motions. She commanded that all defendants remain in Department of State Services custody while awaiting trial.

    This case represents the most significant treason charges brought forward since President Tinubu assumed power in 2023, highlighting efforts to strengthen domestic security amid economic challenges, increased Islamic extremist attacks in northern regions, and rising political tensions.

    Last October, President Tinubu unexpectedly overhauled the entire military leadership structure in what an administration official characterized as an initiative to strengthen national security.

  • Pharmaceutical Giant AbbVie Plans $1.4B North Carolina Manufacturing Hub

    Pharmaceutical Giant AbbVie Plans $1.4B North Carolina Manufacturing Hub

    Pharmaceutical company AbbVie announced Wednesday its plans to construct a $1.4 billion manufacturing facility in North Carolina, representing the largest investment the drugmaker has ever made at a single location.

    The expansive campus will function as AbbVie’s primary United States center for producing injectable medications, distributing treatments both within the country and internationally as the company boosts its domestic manufacturing capabilities.

    Located on 185 acres in Durham, North Carolina, the new facility will produce treatments for immune system conditions, cancer, and neurological disorders.

    Over a four-year period, AbbVie expects to bring on 734 workers at the site, including engineers, research scientists, and manufacturing personnel.

    Development of the project is scheduled to begin in 2026, with completion targeted for late 2028. The construction phase alone is projected to create more than 2,000 temporary jobs.

    The initial construction phase will feature manufacturing buildings, research laboratories, warehouse space, administrative offices, and worker amenities.

    This announcement follows AbbVie’s February commitment to spend $380 million on two new pharmaceutical ingredient production facilities at its North Chicago, Illinois headquarters, aimed at expanding domestic production of treatments for neurological conditions and obesity.

    The North Carolina development represents part of AbbVie’s broader strategy to invest approximately $100 billion in United States research, development, and manufacturing operations over the coming decade.

    Within the past year alone, the pharmaceutical company has allocated more than $2.2 billion toward manufacturing projects across the country.

  • Health Secretary Kennedy Says He Wasn’t Involved in Cancer Drug Rejection

    Health Secretary Kennedy Says He Wasn’t Involved in Cancer Drug Rejection

    During a Senate budget hearing on Wednesday, Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. denied any personal involvement in the Food and Drug Administration’s recent decision to reject a cancer treatment for advanced skin cancer.

    Kennedy was appearing before senators to discuss President Donald Trump’s proposed budget for the Department of Health and Human Services for fiscal year 2027 when he addressed the controversial drug decision.

    “I had nothing to do with this decision,” Kennedy stated, explaining that the choice rested with FDA Commissioner Dr. Marty Makary.

    The FDA rejected Replimune’s experimental treatment called RP1 earlier this month, citing concerns about the company’s research methodology. Federal regulators criticized the pharmaceutical company for conducting a study without a proper control group, demanding evidence from a more rigorous controlled trial to prove the drug’s effectiveness.

    Kennedy defended the agency’s position, saying: “This decision comes out of FDA, and we trust the process there. And I’ve been told by Marty Makary that every panel that looked at that drug unanimously voted against it… because it does not appear to work.”

    The rejection has devastated Replimune’s market value, with company shares dropping almost 70% since the FDA’s announcement. This marks the second time in two years that federal regulators have turned down the cancer treatment.

    However, the stock rebounded 15% on Wednesday after a Wall Street Journal editorial challenged Kennedy’s characterization of the drug’s effectiveness. The opinion piece criticized FDA drug division head Vinay Prasad, who announced his departure from the agency last month.

    The editorial quoted cancer specialists involved in the drug trials who argued the treatment showed promise. It also criticized Kennedy for previously stating at a Capitol Hill hearing that Makary “made the correct decision to not approve that drug.”

    “Denying patients a life-saving medicine for inexplicable reasons is the wrong kind of change. If Dr. Makary doesn’t understand that, the FDA needs a change in leadership,” the editorial argued.

    Following the April 10 rejection, Replimune expressed disagreement with the FDA’s assessment, claiming the agency contradicted positions it had taken during a September meeting about the drug’s approval pathway.

    An HHS spokesperson defended the decision, stating that “FDA career scientists and senior office leadership in the Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research unanimously determined that the current evidence for (Replimune’s drug) does not meet the evidentiary standards required for regulatory approval.”

    Replimune did not respond to requests for comment about the ongoing controversy.

  • Roger Street in Salisbury Shuts Down Wednesday for Emergency Sewer Work

    Roger Street in Salisbury Shuts Down Wednesday for Emergency Sewer Work

    The City of Salisbury’s Waterworks Utilities Division plans to conduct sewer lateral repairs on Wednesday, April 22, targeting the 700 block of Roger Street. The maintenance work represents part of the city’s continuing initiative to enhance and maintain its sewer collection infrastructure.

    Traffic will be blocked along Roger Street between Bethel Street and East Lincoln Avenue while crews complete the repairs. City officials anticipate finishing the work by around 6:30 p.m., assuming no unexpected complications arise during the project.

    Utility locating services and Central Alarm systems have received advance notification about the planned work.

    City officials are asking for community understanding and patience as crews perform this essential infrastructure maintenance.

  • Salisbury Firefighters Receive Top Maryland Honor for Heroic Actions

    Salisbury Firefighters Receive Top Maryland Honor for Heroic Actions

    Four brave firefighters from the Salisbury Fire Department received Maryland’s highest honor for emergency responders during a ceremony held on Kent Island this past Sunday, April 19th.

    The Maryland Fire Chiefs Association presented the Chief Leonard T. King, Sr. Medal of Valor to the four Salisbury personnel during their yearly recognition event. This distinguished award is reserved for Maryland’s fire, rescue, and emergency medical service personnel who put themselves in significant danger while attempting to rescue human lives during critical emergencies over the previous twelve months.

    To earn this recognition, recipients must demonstrate exceptional bravery, personal sacrifice, and performance that goes far beyond their regular duties, all while upholding the strictest safety and professional standards.

    The four Salisbury Fire Department heroes recognized this year include Lt. Andrew Merrill, MPO/Sgt. Mike Ozman, FF/PM Corey Dean, and FF/EMT Thomas Moore, Jr.

    According to the department, these individuals represent the finest qualities of emergency service through their courage, commitment, and dedication to protecting the community they serve.

  • Political Map Drawing: America’s Centuries-Old Practice Remains Controversial

    Political Map Drawing: America’s Centuries-Old Practice Remains Controversial

    Political manipulation of voting district boundaries is intensifying throughout the United States, continuing a practice that has shaped American elections for more than two centuries.

    The term “gerrymander” originated in America over 200 years ago, describing the controversial practice of redrawing legislative district lines for political benefit. This concept has endured because American political competition remains intense, and advancing technology has made politicians increasingly skilled at creating districts that favor their own parties.

    Most states assign redistricting responsibilities to their legislatures, with governors holding approval or veto power over the final maps. These boundaries must be redrawn following each decade’s census to ensure equal voter representation across districts.

    However, several states allow more frequent redistricting beyond the required decennial updates.

    To combat gerrymandering, some states have established independent citizen commissions or bipartisan political panels to handle the redistricting process.

    When one political party dominates both the legislature and governor’s mansion — or holds sufficient legislative seats to override vetoes — they can essentially design districts to maximize their electoral advantages.

    Politicians typically employ two main gerrymandering strategies: spreading opposition voters across multiple districts to weaken their influence, or concentrating opposing party supporters into fewer districts to secure victories in the remaining areas.

    This practice traces back to 1812, when Massachusetts Governor Elbridge Gerry approved legislation redrawing state Senate boundaries to help the Democratic-Republican Party. Critics noted that one strangely shaped district resembled a salamander, prompting a newspaper to label it “The Gerry-mander” — creating the term we use today for politically motivated district drawing. Despite losing his gubernatorial reelection bid in 1812, Gerry successfully won the vice presidency under President James Madison that same year.

    The U.S. Constitution does not prohibit this practice.

    In 2019, the Supreme Court determined that federal courts lack jurisdiction over partisan gerrymandering disputes in a case stemming from North Carolina. Chief Justice John Roberts explained the ruling by stating: “The Constitution supplies no objective measure for assessing whether a districting map treats a political party fairly.”

    The Court emphasized that state courts could still address partisan gerrymandering under their own state constitutions and legal frameworks. However, some state courts, including North Carolina’s Supreme Court, have also declared they cannot rule on partisan redistricting disputes.

    The motivation for gerrymandering intensifies when political control hangs in the balance. Following the 2024 elections that produced a narrow Republican House majority, President Donald Trump encouraged Texas Republican leaders to redraw congressional maps for additional seats in 2026. California Democrats responded by redesigning their own congressional districts to gain more seats — a strategy approved by California voters. This redistricting activity in America’s two largest states prompted officials in other states to similarly redraw House districts for partisan advantage.

    Political scientists and statisticians have created various methods to measure the partisan benefits potentially gained through gerrymandering.

    Republicans, controlling redistricting in more states than Democrats, leveraged 2010 census data to establish significant gerrymandered advantages. An Associated Press examination of that decade’s redistricting revealed Republicans achieved greater political benefits in more states than either party had secured over the previous five decades.

    Democrats adopted similar gerrymandering tactics following the 2020 census to counter Republican advantages. AP analysis of 2024 election results indicated significant political bias in congressional districts across one-third of all states, suggesting widespread gerrymandering. Nevertheless, the total House seats won by both Republicans and Democrats nearly matched expectations based on each party’s vote share across all U.S. districts.

  • Rhode Island Moves Primary Election to Wednesday Over Labor Day Concerns

    Rhode Island Moves Primary Election to Wednesday Over Labor Day Concerns

    PROVIDENCE, R.I. — Rhode Island has rescheduled its upcoming primary election to Wednesday, September 9, pushing the date back one day from the traditional Tuesday voting schedule due to complications with the Labor Day holiday weekend.

    Democratic Governor Dan McKee approved the scheduling change this week. The primary had originally been set for September 8, which would have followed immediately after the Labor Day holiday.

    Election administrators across the state had lobbied for the adjustment, citing logistical challenges in preparing voting locations with such a tight timeline. Despite the date change, candidate filing requirements and deadlines will stay unchanged under the new law.

    Nick Lima, who serves as Cranston’s registrar and elections director, explained the operational difficulties to state legislators during January hearings. “We have to set up over 400 polling places around the state on the day before the election,” Lima said. “That’s very difficult to do on a holiday because many of our polls are schools, social halls and churches.”

    Election date modifications are fairly common among states. Massachusetts lawmakers recently moved their 2026 primary from September 15 to September 1, citing goals to boost voter participation.

    September primaries are held by just four states nationwide: Rhode Island, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, and Delaware. Delaware conducts the nation’s final primary election, scheduled for September 15 this year.

    While Delaware legislators have proposed moving the state’s primary several months earlier, past efforts to advance such changes have failed to gain traction in the statehouse.

  • NOAA Launches Updated Ocean Floor Data Portal for Public Access

    The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration has launched an upgraded online platform that gives the public unprecedented access to ocean floor data and deep-sea discoveries.

    The modernized portal allows users to dive into underwater research findings and view remarkable imagery from ocean expeditions, including encounters with unique marine life found thousands of feet below the surface.

    Among the fascinating discoveries featured in the database are deep-sea creatures like the lizardfish, which was photographed during a 2018 Atlantic Ocean expedition called “Windows to the Deep.” The fearsome-looking fish was captured on camera at a depth of approximately 1,771 meters, or 5,810 feet, off the U.S. Southeast coast.

    The enhanced data portal represents NOAA’s commitment to making ocean exploration findings more accessible to researchers, educators, and curious members of the public who want to learn about the mysteries of the deep sea.

    The timing of the portal’s launch coincides with Earth Day, highlighting the importance of ocean conservation and scientific research in understanding our planet’s underwater ecosystems.

    Users can now browse through years of expedition data, photographs, and scientific observations collected during NOAA’s ongoing efforts to map and study the ocean floor.

  • Caroline County’s Meadow Event Park Hosts Spring Entertainment Lineup

    Caroline County’s Meadow Event Park Hosts Spring Entertainment Lineup

    Those seeking diverse entertainment options can find multiple events at Caroline County’s Meadow Event Park this spring season.

    The venue will present numerous competitions appealing to various interests and age groups, starting with the Virginia Gypsy Vanner Spring Classic Breakout Horse Show from April 23-26. This comprehensive equestrian competition will showcase English, Western, Halter, Trail and Ranch categories. Additional details are available through the J and S Equestrian Events Facebook page or by calling Julie Usoff at 904-673-0765.

    The month concludes with the Virginia Elite Gymnastics Academy’s 2026 VA Women’s Levels 3 and 4 State Championships, scheduled for April 24-26. The USA Gymnastics Virginia website provides complete event information.

    May brings additional attractions, beginning with the Richmond Open from May 1-3. This community-organized tabletop gaming gathering will include vendor booths, miniature gaming competitions, major tournaments, board game activities, and open play sessions. Complete details can be found on the event’s official website.

    The Fredericksburg Area Livestock Show and Sale takes place May 1-2, providing community members the chance to support young participants developing animal husbandry and marketing abilities. Caroline County Virginia Cooperative Extension can be reached at 804-633-6550 for additional information.

    The East Coast Stock Horse Association Ranch Horse Gathering occurs May 2-3, featuring compelling competitions over two days. Programming includes an all-breed ECSHA exhibition, working western rail competition, ranch riding demonstrations, and additional activities. More details are available through their website.

    Those wanting regular updates about upcoming Meadow Event Park activities can sign up for monthly email notifications through their subscription service.

  • Devastating Frost Destroys Maryland Wine Grape Harvest

    Devastating Frost Destroys Maryland Wine Grape Harvest

    Maryland’s wine industry is reeling from devastating crop losses after an unexpected frost struck vineyards throughout the state in the early hours of Tuesday, April 21st.

    The Maryland Department of Agriculture confirmed that grape growers experienced one of the most catastrophic agricultural disasters in decades, with the late-season cold snap destroying what would have been the 2026 harvest.

    The timing of the frost proved particularly damaging, coming after years of steady development that had positioned Maryland as an emerging force in American wine production. The state’s viticulture industry had gained national recognition through consistent quality improvements and innovative growing techniques.

    According to agriculture officials, numerous vineyard operators are confronting their first major frost-related disaster of this magnitude, making the recovery process even more challenging for the affected growers.

    The full extent of the economic impact on Maryland’s wine sector remains under assessment as growers and state agricultural experts survey the damage across affected regions.

  • Exiled Citizens Fear Pope’s Visit May Legitimize African Dictator’s Regime

    Exiled Citizens Fear Pope’s Visit May Legitimize African Dictator’s Regime

    A former resident of Equatorial Guinea who sought asylum in Spain is expressing concern about Pope Leo XIV’s current visit to his African homeland, fearing it may provide undeserved credibility to the nation’s controversial leadership.

    Gutïn Bae Tongala, a 59-year-old chef originally from Annobon Island, departed Equatorial Guinea in 2002 seeking sanctuary in Spain. He cites governmental mistreatment of ethnic minorities and prolonged systematic persecution by the nation’s ruling dynasty as reasons for his departure.

    Vatican statistics show approximately 75% of Equatorial Guinea’s citizens practice Catholicism, representing one of Africa’s highest Catholic populations. The nation serves as the final destination in the pope’s four-country African tour, following visits to Algeria, Cameroon and Angola.

    During his stay in Equatorial Guinea, Leo has criticized the “colonization” of Africa’s natural resources and condemned the “hunger for authority,” calling on the nation to pursue justice and bridge the divide “between those with privilege and those without.”

    Tongala and other refugees from Equatorial Guinea shared with The Associated Press their concerns that President Teodoro Obiang Nguema Mbasogo, who has ruled since 1982 as Africa’s most enduring head of state, might exploit the papal visit to legitimize his administration, which activists characterize as authoritarian.

    “Obiang knows very well that the pope’s visit comes like a ring on his finger,” Tongala said from Spain. “Obiang will use the pope’s presence to clean up his image.”

    According to Tutu Alicante, an American-based advocate who leads the EG Justice human rights organization, the president has attempted to earn international credibility through prominent events, such as welcoming the pope or hosting the Africa Cup of Nations soccer tournament in both 2012 and 2015.

    While Equatorial Guinea maintains official secular status, the Catholic Church, inherited from Spanish colonial rule, remains central to the country’s political and social framework. Religious institutions operate educational facilities, medical centers and community gathering places for the nearly 1.9 million residents.

    Government celebrations including presidential swearing-in ceremonies and Independence Day observances incorporate Catholic Mass. In 2011, Obiang took his oath of office in the massive neo-Gothic Basilica of Immaculate Conception located in his birthplace of Mongomo, designed after St. Peter’s Basilica and Square in Vatican City. This basilica stands as Central Africa’s largest religious structure and Africa’s second-largest, following the Basilica of Our Lady of Peace in Ivory Coast.

    Church leadership “are very much interconnected intrinsically with the government,” Alicante said. “Part of it is the fear the government has instilled in everyone, including the church, and part of it is the monetary gains that the church derives from this government.”

    Neither Catholic authorities in the nation nor government representatives responded to AP’s requests for commentary regarding reported violations in the country.

    Nevertheless, Rev. Fortunatus Nwachukwu, second-in-command at the Vatican’s missionary evangelization department, explained to the AP on Tuesday that the Catholic Church operates in challenging political environments and must navigate them carefully.

    “Should the church go to war against the government? Surely no,” Nwachukwu said. “Should the church swallow everything as if it were normal? No. The church has to continue preaching justice, always in defense of life, human dignity and the common good.”

    The Catholic Church’s relationship with Equatorial Guinea’s government has a complex past. Former President Francisco Macias Nguema targeted Catholics, shuttered multiple churches and prohibited the church in 1978 to sever connections with Spain, the former colonial authority.

    Obiang subsequently assumed control in 1979 by overthrowing his uncle, Nguema, and reversed the prohibition. Obiang became a civilian leader in 1982, the same year he welcomed St. John Paul II during a papal visit.

    Obiang has maintained his position since then, securing six elections amid disputed circumstances.

    World Bank data indicates more than half the population lives in poverty. Human rights organizations have charged the government with exploiting the country’s petroleum revenues primarily to benefit the president’s relatives. One presidential son serves as vice president and has faced conviction for financial crimes in France while being sanctioned by the United Kingdom for similar offenses.

    A 2024 Amnesty International assessment documented what it termed “widespread use of arbitrary arrests, torture and other ill-treatment” throughout the country.

    Carmelo Ovono Obiang, another presidential son, faced investigation in 2024 by Spain’s supreme court regarding alleged abduction and torture of two opposition figures holding Spanish citizenship.

    Analysts and expatriate citizens indicate the president is leveraging Leo’s visit to seek legitimacy despite public frustration with his family’s concentrated control.

    The AP previously reported on the government’s extended internet blackout on Annobon Island following demonstrations against harmful practices by a construction firm. The nation also participates in several African countries receiving millions through unclear agreements with the United States to accept migrants deported to nations other than their countries of origin.

    “I would like the pope to speak out in defense of the Christians who live in Equatorial Guinea and who have to endure the abuses of human rights that occur day by day at the orders of Obiang Nguema,” said Jorge Awal, 27, who now works in the private sector in Spain.

  • Six Accused of Planning Nigerian Government Overthrow Face Treason Charges

    Six Accused of Planning Nigerian Government Overthrow Face Treason Charges

    ABUJA, Nigeria — A half-dozen individuals suspected of scheming to topple Nigeria’s government faced a judge Wednesday as prosecutors brought forward serious accusations of treason and acts of terrorism.

    Each of the six defendants entered not guilty pleas when confronted with the 13 criminal charges that were formally presented Tuesday. The group has remained under detention by Nigeria’s intelligence services for several months.

    Among those facing charges are a former major general who had retired from military service and a current police inspector still on active duty. Authorities are also pursuing a seventh individual, ex-Governor Timipre Sylva of Bayelsa state, who faces accusations of helping to hide the conspiracy but has not been captured.

    Following the entry of their pleas, the judge postponed proceedings until April 27, when the court will consider whether to grant bail to the defendants.

    According to the formal accusations filed by prosecutors, the suspects “conspired with one another to levy war against the state to overawe the president of the Federal Republic.”

    Nigerian officials initially revealed they had prevented an attempted government takeover in January, announcing at that time that multiple military personnel would face prosecution.

    Had the conspiracy succeeded, it would have ended nearly 30 years of elected government in the continent’s most populated nation, which established democratic rule in 1999.

  • South Korean Man Arrested at Tokyo’s Controversial War Shrine During Festival

    South Korean Man Arrested at Tokyo’s Controversial War Shrine During Festival

    TOKYO — Authorities in Japan have taken a 64-year-old South Korean citizen into custody on Wednesday after he allegedly disrupted a spring ceremony at Tokyo’s contentious Yasukuni Shrine by displaying protest banners with political statements.

    The controversial shrine serves as a memorial for Japan’s 2.5 million military personnel who died in conflicts, including those convicted as war criminals. Nations that suffered under Japanese military actions prior to and throughout World War II, particularly China and South Korea, view official visits to this site as evidence that Japan lacks genuine regret for its wartime conduct.

    According to authorities, the detained individual displayed banners containing messages that called on “war criminals” to cease their worship at Yasukuni, while also asserting territorial rights over islands that remain disputed between Japan and South Korea.

    Reports from Kyodo News indicate the protester positioned himself near the shrine’s primary entrance and blocked vehicles transporting imperial messengers. These representatives were scheduled to present ceremonial offerings from the emperor, as noted on the shrine’s official website.

    The incident occurred one day after Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi, who previously made regular visits to pray at the shrine, chose instead to send a religious ornament for the second consecutive time since becoming Japan’s leader. This decision drew sharp criticism from both Chinese and South Korean officials.

    Additionally, on Wednesday, more than 100 conservative legislators, including a Cabinet member, conducted prayers at the shrine.

  • Delaware Residents Celebrate National Brunch Month with Nutritious Egg Dishes

    Delaware Residents Celebrate National Brunch Month with Nutritious Egg Dishes

    April brings National Brunch Month, creating the ideal opportunity to savor morning meals well into the afternoon hours.

    This beloved American dining tradition provides an excellent reason to indulge in “the most important meal of the day” whenever you choose, featuring recipes that highlight breakfast’s most versatile ingredient.

    Nutritionally dense eggs are widely recognized as components of heart-healthy eating plans throughout all life phases. A single large egg delivers 6 grams of premium protein, contains all nine essential amino acids, plus vital vitamins and additional nutrients. The yolk houses nearly half the protein content along with most vitamins and minerals, including nutrients crucial for brain and body function, according to American Egg Board.

    Virginia produces abundant locally-sourced eggs for regional consumers. The state’s chicken egg production achieved 10th place nationally among top agricultural commodities in 2024, bringing in more than $146 million in cash receipts, according to data from the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Economic Research Service.

    Mark this brunch celebration by discovering the adaptability of eggs throughout April—perhaps by preparing one of these distinctive recipes to share with loved ones.

    Visit the Virginia Grown website to locate locally-produced eggs in your area.

    Eggs in Purgatory

    2 tablespoons olive oil
    1 teaspoon harissa sauce
    1 tablespoon tomato paste
    2 large red bell peppers, diced
    ½ cup chopped onion
    2 teaspoons fresh, chopped garlic
    1 teaspoon ground cumin
    ¼ teaspoon salt
    28-ounce can crushed or diced tomatoes, undrained
    6 large eggs
    ½ cup plain nonfat Greek yogurt
    ¼ cup freshly shredded Parmesan cheese

    In a large skillet, combine olive oil, harissa, tomato paste, bell peppers, onion, garlic, cumin and salt. Cook covered on medium heat for 10 minutes or until the peppers and onion are soft, stirring occasionally.

    Stir in canned tomatoes, and simmer. Cook uncovered for 10 minutes or until the sauce has thickened slightly.

    Make 6 indentations in the sauce, and gently break 1 egg into each.

    Simmer uncovered for about 10 minutes or until the whites are set and the yolks are still slightly soft.

    Serve the eggs in the sauce with the yogurt and cheese on the side.

    Overnight French Toast

    1-pound loaf sourdough bread, torn into 1ʺ pieces
    8 large eggs
    2½ cups milk
    ½ cup granulated sugar
    ½ cup brown sugar
    1 tablespoon vanilla extract
    1 teaspoon ground cinnamon
    ½ teaspoon ground ginger
    ¼ teaspoon ground nutmeg
    ¼ teaspoon salt
    3 cups fresh berries such as strawberry, blueberries, raspberries
    1 tablespoon confectioners’ sugar, for garnishing
    maple syrup, for garnishing

    Prepare a 9-by-13-inch baking dish with nonstick cooking spray. Place the bread pieces in the prepared dish in an even layer.

    In a medium bowl, add eggs, milk, granulated sugar, brown sugar, vanilla extract, cinnamon, ginger, nutmeg and salt. Whisk to combine, then pour over the bread. Cover the dish with plastic wrap and refrigerate overnight.

    Heat oven to 350°.

    Remove the plastic wrap from the dish, and bake it for 45-60 minutes until reaching the desired texture.

    Top with fresh berries, confectioners’ sugar and maple syrup, if desired.

    Serve and refrigerate leftovers for up to three days.

    —Recipes courtesy of American Egg Board

  • Treasury Chief: Gulf and Asian Nations Seek US Currency Support Amid Middle East Crisis

    Treasury Chief: Gulf and Asian Nations Seek US Currency Support Amid Middle East Crisis

    WASHINGTON – Multiple allied nations across the Gulf region and Asia have formally approached the United States requesting currency swap agreements to help manage economic disruptions stemming from the Middle East conflict, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent disclosed Wednesday.

    During testimony before a Senate Appropriations subcommittee, Bessent explained that both America and the United Arab Emirates would gain advantages from a potential swap arrangement that President Donald Trump indicated he was evaluating on Tuesday.

    While Bessent declined to identify the specific nations making these requests during the budget hearing, he emphasized that such financial mechanisms would help maintain stability in global markets during the current Middle East crisis.

    “And swap lines, whether it’s from the Federal Reserve or the Treasury, are to maintain order in the dollar funding markets and to prevent the sale of the U.S. assets in a disorderly way,” Bessent explained to lawmakers. “So, the swap line would benefit both the UAE and the U.S., and as I said, numerous other countries, including some of our Asian allies, have also requested them.”

    The Treasury Secretary’s comments highlight how the ongoing Middle East war continues to create ripple effects across international financial systems, prompting allied nations to seek additional economic safeguards through partnerships with the United States.

  • Boeing Reports Better Than Expected Quarterly Results, Stock Surges

    Boeing Reports Better Than Expected Quarterly Results, Stock Surges

    Boeing delivered better-than-anticipated financial results for the first quarter, signaling the aerospace manufacturer’s ongoing recovery following several years of operational challenges and financial difficulties.

    The Seattle-based company announced a net loss of $7 million for the three-month period ending in March, representing a significant improvement from the $31 million loss recorded during the same timeframe last year. Wall Street analysts had projected a much steeper core loss of 83 cents per share, but Boeing’s actual results showed only a 20-cent per share loss, according to LSEG data.

    Investors responded positively to the news, pushing Boeing’s stock price up 5% during midday trading sessions.

    “We’re off to a good start and continue building on our momentum with stronger performance across our business,” CEO Kelly Ortberg said in a memo to employees after the results were released.

    During a Reuters interview, Ortberg discussed potential business opportunities, noting that a significant order from Chinese airlines might materialize during a May meeting between U.S. President Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping. He emphasized that Trump’s backing would be crucial for finalizing such a deal.

    Regarding geopolitical concerns, Ortberg indicated he doesn’t anticipate major disruptions to Boeing’s operations from the Iran conflict.

    “We’ve had no dialogue with any customer about deferral of deliveries” of jetliners, he said. “This is a very long-cycle business. I’d be surprised if we see any major changes coming out of them.”

    Rather than experiencing cancellations, Ortberg noted that customers have requested “that if we do see any slots opening up because of delays, that they’d like to jump in and take those airplanes.”

    The company experienced a $1.5 billion cash outflow during the quarter, primarily attributed to substantial investments in expanding 787 manufacturing capabilities in South Carolina, military aircraft production in the St. Louis region, and establishing a new 737 MAX assembly line in Everett, Washington.

    Boeing currently manufactures approximately 42 of its popular single-aisle aircraft monthly and plans to increase production to 47 units by the end of the year.

    Certification processes for the 737-7 and 737-10 variants, along with the 777X program, also contributed to the cash expenditure.

    Company officials anticipate U.S. regulatory approval for the MAX 7 and 10 models this year, with initial deliveries scheduled for 2027.

    Chief Financial Officer Jay Malave explained during an analyst conference call that Boeing is implementing design modifications to early-production 777X aircraft in preparation for next year’s initial delivery.

    The commercial aviation segment generated $9.2 billion in revenue, marking a 13% increase driven by the strongest first-quarter delivery numbers since 2019. Despite this growth, the division still recorded a $563 million loss for the quarter.

    Ortberg told Reuters that Boeing’s late-2025 acquisition of Spirit AeroSystems, the manufacturer of 737 fuselages, resulted in higher-than-anticipated expenses that impacted the commercial airplane division’s performance. He clarified that these elevated costs weren’t related to production quality problems that have affected Spirit AeroSystems recently.

    The defense and space segment showed strong performance with earnings climbing 50% to $233 million in the first quarter. During this period, the Space Launch System rocket, developed jointly with Northrop Grumman, successfully launched NASA’s Artemis II lunar mission.

    Industry experts and company executives expect continued benefits from increased global defense spending amid ongoing conflicts in the Middle East and Ukraine, plus rising geopolitical tensions worldwide.

    The Pentagon recently awarded Boeing the contract for the nation’s first sixth-generation fighter aircraft, the F-47, and the company remains a contender for the U.S. Navy’s sixth-generation F/A-XX fighter program.

    Boeing’s most stable business unit, global services, reported a 3% rise in operating income to $971 million. However, operating margins declined slightly to 18.1%, which management attributed to last year’s $10.6 billion sale of its Jeppesen digital aviation services subsidiary.

    Overall, Boeing recorded an 11-cent loss per diluted share, or 20 cents per share for core operations in the first quarter, compared to a 16-cent loss per diluted share during the previous year’s comparable period.

  • Orioles Prospect Jackson Holliday Faces Hand Injury Complications

    Orioles Prospect Jackson Holliday Faces Hand Injury Complications

    Baltimore Orioles infielder Jackson Holliday encountered another complication in his recovery from a hand injury during Tuesday’s Triple-A game, prompting team officials to schedule an MRI examination.

    The 22-year-old prospect, who was selected first overall in the 2022 draft, left Norfolk’s matchup against Memphis after feeling discomfort while taking a swing at the plate.

    Holliday has been attempting to return to major league action since breaking a hamate bone during February batting practice. This marks his second episode of hand and wrist pain within the past week.

    “We’re getting him up to Baltimore for an MRI,” Orioles manager Craig Albernaz stated after Tuesday’s 6-5 defeat in Kansas City.

    The young infielder completed 11 rehabilitation appearances with Norfolk between March 27 and April 12, followed by two contests at High-A Fredericksburg on April 18-19, before rejoining Norfolk on Tuesday. His combined performance across 14 minor league games shows a .176 batting average with 9 hits in 51 at-bats, zero home runs, and four runs batted in.

    The son of seven-time All-Star Matt Holliday posted a .242 batting average with 17 homers, 55 RBIs, and 17 stolen bases across 149 games with Baltimore during the 2025 season.

  • Virginia Farm Bureau Members Get Discounts on John Deere Equipment This Spring

    Virginia Farm Bureau Members Get Discounts on John Deere Equipment This Spring

    With spring’s arrival bringing numerous outdoor tasks, homeowners may find themselves needing better equipment than what they used last year. Although purchasing new mowers and tractors represents a significant expense, members of Virginia Farm Bureau have access to special savings on various John Deere products.

    Members of VFB can enroll to receive complimentary upgrades to John Deere Rewards Platinum 1 status, which provides additional savings on equipment, parts and products. Additionally, they can receive discounts of up to $150 on selected residential lawn mowing machines.

    To be eligible, individuals must maintain Virginia Farm Bureau membership for a minimum of 30 days. Certain qualification criteria may be required, such as waiting periods or restrictions on specific models and equipment types.

    Those interested can register at JohnDeere.com/Farm Bureau or visit the Virginia Farm Bureau website for additional details about the program.

  • Expert Tips Help Delaware Homeowners Achieve Greener, Healthier Lawns

    Expert Tips Help Delaware Homeowners Achieve Greener, Healthier Lawns

    Many homeowners view lawn maintenance as a seasonal chore, but implementing smart strategies can transform yard work from burden to benefit.

    Proper mowing techniques can significantly improve both the health and visual appeal of residential lawns, creating enhanced curb appeal while actually reducing long-term maintenance requirements.

    Property owners can develop healthier grass with fewer weeds by focusing on soil nutrition. The Old Farmer’s Almanac suggests applying a quarter-inch layer of compost rich in organic matter monthly throughout the growing season. This practice improves soil porosity, enhances drainage, and helps prevent root rot.

    Lawn care specialists from The Old Farmer’s Almanac and Virginia Cooperative Extension have compiled essential strategies for creating a thriving yard:

    Pre-mowing preparation: When using string trimmers, complete edging work before mowing so grass clippings get chopped by the mower blade. Avoid trimming close to tree bark and maintain vegetation-free zones around tree bases.

    Proper cutting height: Different grass varieties require specific cutting heights, typically between 2-3 inches for both warm and cool-season varieties, though individual species may vary. Cool-season grasses benefit from higher cutting during late spring and early summer to better handle environmental stress. Warm-season varieties become denser when cut shorter during summer months. Shaded areas should be maintained at the higher end of recommended ranges to maximize leaf surface area.

    Height adjustment technique: Position the mower on a solid surface, use a measuring tape to check current blade height, then modify deck settings to achieve desired levels.

    The one-third principle: Never cut more than one-third of grass blade length in a single session, as this depletes root energy reserves. For overgrown areas, gradually reduce height over several sessions spaced 2-3 days apart.

    Directional variation: Change mowing patterns each session to promote upright growth and prevent soil compaction. Rotate patterns by 45 or 90 degrees from previous sessions.

    Dry conditions only: Avoid mowing wet grass. Morning mowing should wait until dew evaporates completely.

    Sharp blade maintenance: Keep cutting edges sharp to prevent grass tearing, improve fuel efficiency, and extend equipment life. Sharpen blades three times per season: spring startup, late spring, and mid-to-late summer.

    Natural fertilization: Mow without collection bags, allowing clippings to decompose and return nutrients to the soil naturally.

    Clump removal: While leaving clippings benefits the lawn, remove any thick clumps that could smother underlying grass.

    Edge maintenance: Use spading tools to create clean borders between lawn and garden beds, and refresh mulch around trees to prevent mower damage that can cause disease and tree death.

    Additional lawn care guidance and safety information can be found through The Old Farmer’s Almanac and Virginia Cooperative Extension resources.

  • Delaware Cancer Consortium Marks Quarter Century of Fighting Cancer

    Delaware Cancer Consortium Marks Quarter Century of Fighting Cancer

    DOVER, Del. — Healthcare professionals, state lawmakers, and community advocates came together Monday for a significant milestone in Delaware’s fight against cancer.

    The Delaware Cancer Consortium held its biennial retreat on April 20th, welcoming 124 participants to commemorate the organization’s 25th anniversary. The gathering focused on the consortium’s ongoing mission of driving change, fostering innovation, and ultimately saving lives throughout the First State.

    The retreat brought together key stakeholders from across Delaware’s medical community and government to discuss the organization’s progress over the past quarter-century and chart a course for future cancer prevention and treatment initiatives.

    Since its founding, the Delaware Cancer Consortium has worked to coordinate statewide efforts in cancer research, prevention, and patient care, establishing itself as a cornerstone of the state’s public health infrastructure.

  • Maryland Schools Partner with State to Plant Trees for Outdoor Learning

    Maryland Schools Partner with State to Plant Trees for Outdoor Learning

    Three Maryland state agencies are joining forces this Earth Week to expand outdoor learning opportunities through tree planting initiatives at schools across the state.

    The Maryland State Department of Education, Maryland Department of the Environment, and Maryland Department of Natural Resources are working together to boost enrollment in the Schoolyard Forests Program, which is part of Maryland’s ambitious 5 Million Trees initiative.

    Managed by the DNR Maryland Forest Service, the Schoolyard Forests Program assists schools in developing outdoor learning environments that benefit student health and enhance education through tree planting activities, tree maintenance, and environmental studies. Maryland’s 5 Million Trees initiative has already exceeded 1.5 million native trees planted, representing significant progress toward the state’s 2031 target of 5 million trees.

    This week, representatives from all three agencies participated in a tree planting ceremony at Northview Elementary School in Prince George’s County Public Schools, where students planted 30 trees including redbud, flowering dogwood, and tulip poplar varieties.

    “As students take part in planting and caring for these trees, they are not only learning about the environment, but building a sense of pride and connection to their schools and communities,” said Dr. Carey M. Wright, State Superintendent of Schools. “The Schoolyard Forest Program shows the power of hands-on learning to inspire our youth and protect our environment.”

    Secretary Serena McIlwain from the Maryland Department of the Environment emphasized the community benefits of the program. “By expanding the Schoolyard Forests Program, we are helping schools across Maryland create healthier, greener spaces where students can learn, play, and connect with nature,” said McIlwain. “These projects show how tree planting can bring communities together, improve air quality, and inspire the next generation of environmental leaders.”

    Maryland Department of Natural Resources Secretary Josh Kurtz highlighted the educational advantages of outdoor learning environments. “Study after study has shown that children perform better academically, develop enhanced problem-solving skills, and have reduced stress levels when they have access to outdoor learning opportunities at their schools,” said Kurtz. “By adding new trees and outdoor spaces to more schools in Maryland we’re creating these improved learning opportunities and ensuring that more students have access to natural areas.”

    The initiative supports multiple Maryland environmental and educational objectives under the Climate Solutions Now Act, the Greenhouse Gas Reduction Act, and the Chesapeake Bay Watershed Agreement. The program promotes fair access to green spaces and outdoor educational experiences throughout the state, aligning with the Governor’s Executive Order to strengthen youth engagement through the Maryland Outdoor Learning Partnership.

    The Schoolyard Forests Program has formed a partnership with the Maryland Association for Environmental and Outdoor Education since 2024 and has successfully completed over 45 school planting projects to date.

  • Sony’s AI Robot Defeats Professional Table Tennis Players in Historic Achievement

    Sony’s AI Robot Defeats Professional Table Tennis Players in Historic Achievement

    Sony’s groundbreaking robotic table tennis player has successfully challenged and occasionally defeated professional human competitors, marking what researchers describe as a historic breakthrough in artificial intelligence and robotics capabilities.

    The Japanese technology company developed the mechanical athlete, dubbed Ace, and tested it against skilled human players. The robot demonstrates remarkable abilities through its nine strategically placed cameras surrounding the playing area and its exceptional capacity to track the ball’s logo for spin analysis.

    Ace mastered the sport through reinforcement learning, an AI training technique that allows machines to improve through practice and experience.

    “There’s no way to program a robot by hand to play table tennis. You have to learn how to play from experience,” explained Sony AI researcher Peter Dürr, who co-authored the research published Wednesday in Nature journal.

    Sony constructed a regulation-sized table tennis facility at its Tokyo headquarters to ensure fair competition between the robot and highly trained human athletes, Dürr told The Associated Press. Professional players expressed amazement at Ace’s skill level during testing.

    According to Sony, this represents the “first time a robot has achieved human, expert-level play in a commonly played competitive sport in the physical world — a longstanding milestone for AI and robotics research.”

    The specially designed robot features eight articulated joints that control its movement range, allowing it to position its paddle, deliver shots, and quickly counter opponent strategies.

    “Speed is really one of the fundamental issues in robotics today, especially in scenarios or environments that are not fixed,” stated Michael Spranger, Sony AI’s president, during an interview.

    “We see a lot of robots that are in factories that are very, very fast,” Spranger continued. “But they’re doing the same trajectory over and over again. With this technology, we show that it’s actually possible to train robots to be very adaptive and competitive and fast in uncertain environments that constantly change.”

    Spranger indicated such advances could benefit manufacturing sectors and other industries, though he acknowledged the potential military applications of such rapid, perceptive technology.

    While a humanoid robot recently outpaced human marathon records in Beijing, creating a machine capable of real-time interaction and competition with skilled human athletes presents unique technical challenges.

    Spranger emphasized the importance of maintaining competitive balance, ensuring the robot’s speed, reach, and performance matched those of dedicated athletes who train at least 20 hours weekly. Ace operates under official table tennis regulations on standard court dimensions.

    “It’s very easy to build a superhuman table tennis robot,” Spranger noted. “You build a machine that sucks in the ball and shoots it out much faster than a human can return it. But that’s not the goal here. The goal is to have some level of comparability, some level of fairness to the human, and win really at the level of AI and the level of decision-making and tactics and, to some extent, skill.”

    This approach means “the robot cannot just win by hitting the ball faster than any human ever could, but it has to win by actually playing the game,” he added.

    Computer scientists have traditionally used board games like chess to measure AI progress, later expanding into complex video game environments. However, transitioning AI from digital simulations to physical world applications remains the ultimate goal for robotics developers.

    The previous year represented a “kind of ChatGPT moment for robotics,” according to Spranger, with innovative AI methods emerging to help robots understand real-world settings and perform physically challenging tasks, including acrobatic maneuvers.

    Sony joins other technology companies exploring robotic table tennis. John Billingsley pioneered such research in 1983 with his paper “Robot Ping-Pong,” while Google’s DeepMind division has also investigated the sport recently.

    Despite the achievement’s significance, Billingsley suggested Sony’s comprehensive computer vision and motion tracking systems create unfair advantages against human opponents limited to two eyes.

    “I would not want to belittle the achievement, but they have gone at the task mob-handed, and used sledgehammer techniques,” wrote Billingsley, a retired mechatronics professor from Australia’s University of Southern Queensland, in his AP correspondence.

    Nevertheless, he acknowledged that the work reinforces how “true progress comes out of contests, whether they involve hitting a ball or setting foot on Mars.”

    Japanese professionals Minami Ando and Kakeru Sone participated in competitions against Sony’s robot, with Japanese Table Tennis Association officials serving as match judges.

    Following the Nature publication submission, Sony researchers continued development, reporting that Ace increased shot velocity and rally intensity while adopting more aggressive play closer to table edges. In December testing against four skilled competitors, Ace defeated three of the four players.

    Veteran player Kinjiro Nakamura, who represented Japan in the 1992 Barcelona Olympics, observed Ace execute a particularly impressive shot and remarked that “no one else would have been able to do that. I didn’t think it was possible.”

    However, witnessing the robot’s success “means that there is a possibility that a human could do it too,” Nakamura concluded in his published comments within the Nature study.

  • High Court Backs Michigan’s Battle Against Great Lakes Oil Pipeline

    High Court Backs Michigan’s Battle Against Great Lakes Oil Pipeline

    WASHINGTON — In a unanimous decision Wednesday, the U.S. Supreme Court handed Michigan a victory in its ongoing battle to shut down a contentious oil pipeline running beneath the Great Lakes.

    The nation’s highest court determined that Michigan’s legal challenge against the aging pipeline will continue in state court after Enbridge energy company failed to meet a crucial deadline for transferring the case to federal jurisdiction.

    Justice Sonia Sotomayor authored the court’s opinion, stating that Enbridge had exceeded the time limit for attempting to relocate the proceedings to federal court.

    The legal battle centers on a complex dispute involving a pipeline that has transported crude oil and natural gas liquids from Superior, Wisconsin, to Sarnia, Ontario, for more than seven decades since beginning operations in 1953.

    In June 2019, Michigan’s Attorney General Dana Nessel filed suit in state court, demanding the cancellation of the easement permitting Enbridge to operate a 4.5-mile stretch of pipeline beneath the Straits of Mackinac, where Lake Michigan and Lake Huron connect. The Democratic attorney general successfully obtained a restraining order from Ingham County Judge James Jamo in June 2020 that temporarily halted pipeline operations, though Enbridge later resumed activities after satisfying safety conditions.

    Two years later, in 2021, Enbridge attempted to transfer the lawsuit to federal court, claiming the case impacts trade relations between the United States and Canada. However, a three-judge panel from the 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals rejected this move in June 2024, determining the company had missed the required 30-day window for changing court jurisdictions.

    The disputed pipeline segment, known as Line 5, has faced mounting scrutiny since 2017 when Enbridge engineers disclosed they had been aware of damage to the section’s protective coating since 2014. Safety concerns intensified in 2018 after a boat anchor struck the underwater section, raising alarm about potential environmental disasters from a rupture.

    Under Democratic Governor Gretchen Whitmer’s administration, Michigan’s Department of Natural Resources canceled the straits easement for Line 5 in 2020. Enbridge has responded by filing a separate federal lawsuit challenging this revocation.

    Currently, the company is pursuing permits to construct a protective tunnel around the underwater pipeline section. While the Michigan Public Service Commission approved necessary permits in 2023, Enbridge still awaits authorization from the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and Michigan’s Department of Environment, Great Lakes and Energy.

    The pipeline controversy extends beyond Michigan’s borders into Wisconsin, where a federal judge in Madison last summer ordered Enbridge to cease operations within three years on Line 5 sections crossing the Bad River Band of Lake Superior’s tribal lands. The company has proposed rerouting the pipeline away from the reservation and has challenged the shutdown order before the 7th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.

  • High Court Allows Afghan War Veteran’s Lawsuit Against Defense Contractor

    High Court Allows Afghan War Veteran’s Lawsuit Against Defense Contractor

    WASHINGTON — The nation’s highest court has given the green light for an Afghanistan war veteran to move forward with his legal case against a defense contractor following a devastating suicide attack that left him permanently disabled.

    In a 6-3 decision Wednesday, the Supreme Court sided with Winston Hencely, a former Army specialist who sustained life-altering injuries while preventing a suicide bomber from reaching a Veterans Day 5K run at Bagram Airfield in 2016.

    The attacker, Ahmad Nayeb, detonated his explosive device after Hencely confronted him, resulting in five deaths and injuries to more than a dozen others, according to legal filings.

    The blast sent projectiles into Hencely’s skull and brain tissue, causing permanent damage to the left side of his body. Medical records show he now suffers from irregular brain activity, seizures, and traumatic brain injury, his legal team stated.

    Following an Army probe that blamed Fluor Corporation for inadequate oversight of Nayeb, who constructed the explosive device while employed at the military installation, Hencely filed his state-level lawsuit against the company.

    The Texas-based construction and engineering firm, headquartered in Irving, contended it should be shielded from legal action because it operated under government contract during active combat operations, which typically grants immunity from civil suits.

    However, the Supreme Court rejected this argument. The court’s majority determined that while contractors receive protection when properly executing government agreements, Fluor allegedly breached its supervisory responsibilities regarding Nayeb.

    Justice Clarence Thomas authored the majority decision, with support from Justices Sonia Sotomayor, Elena Kagan, Neil Gorsuch, Amy Coney Barrett and Ketanji Brown Jackson.

    The three dissenting justices — Samuel Alito, John Roberts and Brett Kavanaugh — opposed the ruling. Alito expressed concern that Hencely’s legal action could interfere with military authority and wartime strategies, including policies that encouraged hiring Afghan nationals as contractors.

  • NOAA Celebrates Earth Day 2026 with Stunning Satellite Views of Our Planet

    The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration commemorated Earth Day 2026 on April 22nd by showcasing breathtaking images of our planet captured from space through their advanced satellite technology.

    NOAA’s orbital observation systems provided stunning perspectives of Earth to mark this year’s environmental awareness celebration, offering viewers a chance to see our world from the unique vantage point that only satellites can provide.

    The federal agency’s satellite network continues to monitor Earth’s systems from space, delivering critical data about weather patterns, climate conditions, and environmental changes while also capturing these remarkable views that remind us of our planet’s beauty and fragility.

    These orbital images serve as a powerful reminder of Earth’s interconnected systems and the importance of environmental stewardship as communities worldwide observe Earth Day 2026.

  • Former WWE Executive Tapped to Lead Effort to Eliminate Education Department

    Former WWE Executive Tapped to Lead Effort to Eliminate Education Department

    President Trump has selected Linda McMahon, the former chief executive of World Wrestling Entertainment, to head the Department of Education with the specific goal of eliminating the federal agency entirely.

    McMahon, who spent decades in the professional wrestling industry, now faces the task of overseeing the very department Trump wants to abolish. According to New Yorker journalist Zach Helfand, her extensive background at WWE has uniquely positioned her for this unprecedented assignment.

    Helfand examines the connection between McMahon’s entertainment industry leadership and her current mission to dismantle federal education oversight, highlighting how her corporate experience shaped her approach to this controversial government role.

  • Musk’s SpaceX Eyes $60B Purchase of AI Coding Assistant Cursor

    Musk’s SpaceX Eyes $60B Purchase of AI Coding Assistant Cursor

    Elon Musk’s rocket company SpaceX has revealed it holds the option to acquire Cursor, an artificial intelligence programming assistant, for $60 billion sometime this year. The potential acquisition comes as SpaceX seeks to strengthen its position against competitors like Anthropic and OpenAI while preparing for a possible public stock offering.

    The space company disclosed it also has the alternative option to invest $10 billion in a collaborative partnership with Cursor instead of a full buyout.

    The announcement was made Tuesday through Musk’s social media platform X, which along with the AI chatbot Grok forms part of the interconnected business portfolio that Musk has integrated with his aerospace venture.

    Cursor, developed by San Francisco-based startup Anysphere, has gained popularity as an AI-powered programming tool. SpaceX appears drawn to what it describes as Cursor’s extensive reach among skilled software developers, which would provide access to an expanded user network.

    The coding tool company stated that its new alliance with SpaceX’s AI division xAI will allow it to develop advanced artificial intelligence products using xAI’s enormous data processing facility called Colossus, located in Memphis, Tennessee.

    “We’ve wanted to push our training efforts much further, but we’ve been bottlenecked by compute,” Cursor said in a statement on X, which didn’t mention the possibility of being acquired. “With this partnership, our team will leverage xAI’s Colossus infrastructure to dramatically scale up the intelligence of our models.”

    Founded in 2022, Cursor helped launch a programming approach known as “vibe coding” as artificial intelligence coding tools have grown increasingly sophisticated in handling software development tasks.

    The company faces competition from similar programming tools including Anthropic’s Claude Code and OpenAI’s Codex, though it has depended significantly on partnerships with these larger AI research firms for its underlying technology.

    A leading AI researcher created the term “vibe coding” in early 2025 while experimenting with Cursor’s Composer feature combined with Anthropic’s Claude Sonnet during personal weekend coding projects.

  • Britain Approves Historic Legislation Creating Smoke-Free Generation

    Britain Approves Historic Legislation Creating Smoke-Free Generation

    LONDON — Anti-smoking advocates are celebrating a major victory after British lawmakers approved groundbreaking legislation designed to create the world’s first smoke-free generation.

    The newly passed Tobacco and Vapes Bill prohibits anyone born after December 31, 2008 from purchasing cigarettes at any point in their lives. This means today’s teenagers will face a lifelong ban on tobacco purchases as the minimum buying age increases annually.

    “The end of smoking, and the devastating harm it causes, is no longer uncertain — it’s inevitable,” declared Hazel Cheeseman, chief executive of Action on Smoking and Health, following Tuesday’s legislative approval that caps decades of advocacy efforts.

    The measure awaits King Charles III’s formal approval, which is considered a procedural formality. Once enacted, the law will also grant authorities expanded powers to control tobacco, vaping and nicotine products, including restrictions on flavoring and packaging.

    While current regulations already prohibit tobacco and vape sales to minors under 18, this legislation extends that prohibition throughout the lifetime of today’s youth population.

    This positions Britain among nations with the world’s most aggressive anti-smoking policies. New Zealand enacted similar legislation in 2022, though a later administration reversed those measures.

    Government statistics show smoking rates in Britain have dropped by two-thirds since the 1970s, yet approximately 6.4 million residents — roughly 13% of the population — continue using tobacco products.

    Health officials report that smoking contributes to approximately 80,000 annual deaths nationwide and remains the leading preventable factor in mortality, disability and health complications.

    “Children in the U.K. will be part of the first smoke-free generation, protected from a lifetime of addiction and harm,” stated Health Secretary Wes Streeting.

  • Spanish Prosecutor Seeks to Drop Corruption Case Against PM’s Wife

    Spanish Prosecutor Seeks to Drop Corruption Case Against PM’s Wife

    MADRID – A prosecutor in Spain has formally requested that a judge dismiss corruption charges against Begoña Gomez, the wife of Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez, according to court documents released Wednesday.

    The legal action represents the most significant judicial threat confronting the Socialist leader and his family members. Sanchez’s brother David is scheduled to face trial next month on separate allegations of influence peddling.

    Gomez has consistently maintained her innocence throughout the proceedings.

    The prime minister briefly contemplated stepping down in April 2024 when investigating judge Juan Carlos Peinado launched the inquiry into his wife’s activities. Sanchez has publicly stood by his family members, characterizing the legal challenges as politically motivated attacks orchestrated by far-right opposition groups.

    Judge Peinado now faces the decision of whether to honor the prosecutor’s dismissal request or proceed with a jury trial in another court. Should the case move forward, the prosecutor indicated they would argue for Gomez’s acquittal during trial proceedings.

    The accusations against Gomez originate from far-right political party Vox and multiple conservative advocacy organizations, including Hazte Oir. Court filings submitted this week and reviewed by Reuters show these groups are pursuing a maximum prison term of 24 years for the prime minister’s wife.

    The probe focuses on allegations that Gomez leveraged her status as the prime minister’s spouse to obtain corporate sponsors for a university master’s degree program under her direction, potentially circumventing required public procurement procedures.

    The formal charges against Gomez and her assistant at the prime minister’s official residence include influence peddling, private sector corruption, misappropriation of funds, and improper use of public resources.

    In his most recent court ruling, Judge Peinado, who is approaching retirement, characterized Gomez’s alleged actions as behavior more appropriate for an “absolute monarchy” rather than a contemporary constitutional democracy.

  • White House Ballroom Project Allows Anonymous Donors, Limits Ethics Reviews

    White House Ballroom Project Allows Anonymous Donors, Limits Ethics Reviews

    Recently disclosed documents reveal the Trump administration established a structure that permits anonymous private contributions totaling hundreds of millions of dollars for a proposed White House ballroom, while restricting federal ethics oversight of the initiative.

    The October agreement between the White House, National Park Service, and Trust for the National Mall outlines the legal and funding structure for the approximately $400 million initiative, which would represent the most substantial modification to the White House grounds in decades.

    President Trump has positioned the White House ballroom as a signature achievement of his second presidential term, describing it as a transformative improvement financed through private contributions instead of public funds.

    However, the magnitude of the undertaking and how the administration has managed fundraising and transparency has prompted growing concerns from oversight organizations and legal scholars, who question the project’s openness, potential donor influence, and compliance with established ethical standards.

    Public Citizen, a watchdog organization, secured the document through litigation against the Park Service and Interior Department following a public records request, subsequently sharing it with news organizations.

    “The Trump Administration’s failure to disclose this contract was flatly unlawful,” stated Wendy Liu, Public Citizen attorney and lead counsel on the lawsuit. “The American people are entitled to transparency over this multi-million-dollar project, and this win gets us a bit closer to knowing the truth.”

    When requested for response, White House spokesman David Ingle indicated the ballroom contributors encompass numerous corporations and individuals donating “to make the People’s House better for generations to come.”

    “The same critics who are alleging fake conflicts of interest would also complain if American taxpayers were footing the bill for these long-overdue renovations,” Ingle stated.

    The agreement allows contributors to maintain anonymity and contains clauses limiting the revelation of their identities, based on the document. It also creates a review mechanism for possible conflicts of interest concerning the Park Service and Interior Department, but excludes similar requirements for the White House or president.

    The proposed ballroom would overshadow other sections of the White House complex, with administration representatives describing an approximately 90,000-square-foot building designed to accommodate major state functions and receptions.

    The initiative aims to substitute activities normally conducted in temporary structures on the South Lawn and would substantially increase capacity for formal dinners, diplomatic meetings, and official events. Proposals include a multi-level facility featuring service spaces, security enhancements, and integrated connections to the current executive residence grounds.

    Trump has indicated roughly $300 million has been collected for the initiative, part of his wider effort to transform Washington.

    Numerous identified contributors revealed by the White House following agreement to publicize their names — including Amazon, Lockheed Martin, Palantir Technologies, and Google — maintain billions of dollars in government contracts collectively.

    A federal appeals court recently permitted ballroom construction to proceed while a legal dispute continues. The case, filed by the National Trust for Historic Preservation, contends the administration failed to obtain proper authorization before starting East Wing demolition and launching the project.

    The recent decision temporarily overturned a ruling issued the previous day by U.S. District Judge Richard Leon in Washington, who determined the ballroom project violated the law without Congressional approval.