
Hard hats and dummy plates: Reports of ICE ruses add to fears in Minnesota
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — For days, Luis Ramirez had an uneasy feeling about the men dressed as utility workers he’d seen outside his family’s Mexican restaurant in suburban Minneapolis. They wore high-visibility vests and spotless white hard hats, he noticed, even while parked in their vehicle. His search for the Wisconsin-based electrician advertised on the car’s doors returned no results. On Tuesday, when their Nissan returned to the lot outside his restaurant, Ramirez, 31, filmed his with...
Read MoreNational News
- Hard hats and dummy plates: Reports of ICE ruses add to fears in Minnesota
- 'We will pay,' Savannah Guthrie says in desperate video plea to potential kidnappers of her mother
- Washington Post publisher Will Lewis says he's stepping down, days after big layoffs at the paper
- Appeals court affirms Trump policy of jailing immigrants without bond
- Hims Hers drops plan for knockoff of Novo Nordisk's new Wegovy weight loss pill
Washington Post publisher Will Lewis says he's stepping down, days after big layoffs at the paper
Washington Post publisher Will Lewis said Saturday that he’s stepping down, ending a troubled tenure three days after the newspaper said that it was laying off one-third of its staff. Lewis announced his departure in a two-paragraph email to the newspaper's staff, saying that after two years of transformation, “now is the right time for me to step aside. ” The Post's chief financial officer, Jeff D'Onofrio, was appointed temporary publisher. Neither Lewis nor the newspaper's billionaire...
Read MorePolitics
- Washington Post publisher Will Lewis says he's stepping down, days after big layoffs at the paper
- Health costs are fueling voter stress and powering Democratic campaigns
- Republicans rarely criticize Trump in his second term. A racist post briefly changed that
- Los Angeles mayor's race kicks off amid homelessness, raids and fallout from deadly 2025 wildfire
- Trump aims to hold the first meeting of his new Board of Peace in Washington this month
US births dropped last year, suggesting the 2024 uptick was short-lived
NEW YORK (AP) — U. S. births fell a little in 2025, according to newly posted provisional data. Slightly over 3. 6 million births have been reported through birth certificates, or about 24,000 fewer than in 2024. The decline seems to confirm predictions by some experts, who doubted a slight increase in births in 2024 marked the start of an upward trend. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention updated its provisional birth data late last week, filling in two months of missing data and...
Read MoreScience News
- US births dropped last year, suggesting the 2024 uptick was short-lived
- Can apes play pretend? Scientists use an imaginary tea party to find out
- Companies can now claim 'no artificial colors' if they add plant-based color to food
- Pandemic disruptions to health care worsened cancer survival, study suggests
- Musk vows to put data centers in space and run them on solar power but experts have their doubts

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