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Apr 08 2024
Analysis
Is Corporate America in Denial About Trump?
There was anxiety in the thin mountain air when the planet’s economic leaders gathered in January at Davos for the 54th meeting of the World Economic Forum. Donald Trump had just trounced Nikki Haley in the Iowa caucuses, all but securing the Republican nomination for president. Haley was reliable, a known quantity. A resurgent Trump, on the other hand, was more worrying.
The Davos
New York Times (News)May 14 2024
News
MSNBC Panelists Scoff at Michael Cohen’s ‘Apology’ to Americans at Trump Trial: ‘Let’s Not Try To Make Yourself Captain America Here’
MSNBC legal analysts Charles Coleman Jr. and David Cevallos found themselves equally as put off by Michael Cohen testifying on Tuesday that he’d apologized to the American people for his work with Donald Trump. The former president is facing more than 30 felony counts in his Manhattan hush money trial for falsifying business records. According to Cohen and the prosecution, Cohen covered hush
MediaiteMay 06 2024
News
Cynthia Erivo and More to Honor America's Military for PBS's National Memorial Day Concert (Exclusive)
The National Memorial Day Concert — America’s official remembrance of military men and woman who gave their lives in service of their country, as well as their families — is returning to PBS for the ceremony’s 35th annual broadcast on May 26 with an all-star lineup to commemorate their sacrifices. The program, airing live from the West Lawn of the U.S. Capitol, will feature moving dramatic
PeopleApr 19 2024
News
The Big Burnout: Life on the Front Lines of America’s Wildfires
With record-setting blazes becoming more and more common, the demands placed on wildland firefighters are greater than ever. Already this year, the Smokehouse Creek Fire, which broke out in the Texas Panhandle in February, has become the second-largest wildfire in U.S. history, burning nearly 1.1 million acres. Last year, a relatively quiet fire season, saw the Lahaina fire on Maui, Hawaii’s
ProPublicaApr 27 2024
News
As solar capacity grows, some of America's most productive farmland is at risk
Dave Duttlinger's first thought when he saw a dense band of yellowish-brown dust smearing the sky above his Indiana farm was: I warned them this would happen.
About 445 acres of his fields near Wheatfield, Indiana, are covered in solar panels and related machinery – land that in April 2019 Duttlinger leased to Dunns Bridge Solar LLC, for one of the largest solar developments in the
ReutersApr 07 2024
News
The Gang That Preyed on America’s Small Museums
The first burglary was in 1999 at Keystone College in Factoryville, Pa. One of the gang, authorities said, sneaked onto the campus, smashed some glass display cases and walked off with memorabilia, including a baseball jersey once worn by Christy Mathewson, the legendary pitcher. The Everhart Museum in Scranton was next, six years later. An Andy Warhol silk screen print and a painting
New York Times (News)Apr 22 2024
News
Colorado’s Elk Creek Ranch: America’s Ultimate Sporting Community
For nearly 20 years, the sparsely populated western slope of northwest Colorado has harbored one of America’s most exclusive—and little known—sporting communities. Simply put, Elk Creek Ranch is a 25,000-acre sportsman’s playground like none other. At its core, it’s a fly angler’s utopia, complete with 33 miles of private trout water and numerous lakes where rainbows and browns grow to beastly
ForbesApr 22 2024
News
America's bridge safety surprise: They're getting better
America's bridge infrastructure — long seen as dysfunctional — has been steadily improving for the last 20 years. Why it matters: The amount of bridges rated poor, or an equivalent metric, by the federal government's bridge inventory has fallen from 15% in 2000 to 6.8% in 2023. Zoom in: More than 1,200 bridges across the U.S. have been rated in poor condition for more than 5 years, according
AxiosMay 16 2024
News
Sophie Turner Said America's Stance On Gun Control And Women's Rights Made Her Realize She Had To Get Her Kids Out
This was hardly surprising, with Sophie making no secret of her dream of returning to her home country after she moved to the US to be with Joe in 2019. "I really love living in America," Sophie went on. "But, for my mental health, I have to be around my friends and my family. And also for my daughter — I would love her to get the education and school life that I was so lucky to have." And in
BuzzFeed News