
Pentagon bars journalists from its press office, saying it has become a classified space
NEW YORK (AP) — In another of a series of moves restricting media access at the Pentagon, the Defense Department has declared that its press office is now a classified space inaccessible to journalists. On X, acting Pentagon press secretary Joel Valdez confirmed the move, saying there was “nothing controversial” about it and that it came because speechwriters, who use classified material, were now occupying the space. “The Pentagon Press Office has been redesignated as a Sensitive due...
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- Pentagon bars journalists from its press office, saying it has become a classified space
- Scott Pelley of 60 Minutes accuses CBS News head Bari Weiss of murdering the show, report says
- A chilling, apparently random stabbing on a MARTA train leaves a 66-year-old woman dead
- Florida sues OpenAI and CEO Sam Altman, claiming company concealed serious risks of ChatGPT
- Jury deliberates in trial of South Carolina store owner who fatally shot Black teen
Sen. Bernie Sanders stands by Graham Platner after controversy over sexually explicit texts
WASHINGTON (AP) — Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders said Monday that he is standing by Graham Platner in the wake of media reports that the Maine Senate candidate previously exchanged sexually explicit text messages with several women while he was married. Platner, a Democrat, posted a video over the weekend taken by his wife, Amy Gertner, who reportedly told his campaign of the text messages last year. In the video, Gertner decried coverage of the issue as “gossip” and said “being married a...
Read MorePolitics
- Sen. Bernie Sanders stands by Graham Platner after controversy over sexually explicit texts
- Scott Pelley of 60 Minutes accuses CBS News head Bari Weiss of murdering the show, report says
- Trump reconsidering $1.8 billion fund, AP source says, as Justice Department temporarily pauses it
- US to drastically slash the number of embassies in Africa that can process visas
- More Mandelson files released in UK bring bad news for Starmer, but many questions remain unanswered
Wyomings Path of the Pronghorn is a signature away from protections sought for a quarter century
From afar, conservation biologist Joel Berger has tracked Wyoming’s long-lasting attempt to designate a migration corridor used by pronghorn that seasonally trek upwards of 150 miles from Interstate 80 all the way to Grand Teton National Park. In the early 2000s, Berger, then a Jackson Hole resident, was among the loudest voices urging land and wildlife managers to take steps to ensure that pronghorn could continue moving across a fragmented landscape that was on the front end of the and gas...
Read MoreScience News
- Wyomings Path of the Pronghorn is a signature away from protections sought for a quarter century
- Venices growing flamingo population finds refuge in recovering wetlands
- 8 crested ibises released in Japanese town decades after extinction in Japan
- As the Pentagon pushes for battlefield AI, some military leaders urge caution
- Experimental pill promises new hope for deadly pancreatic cancer

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