
Dozens of firefighters battle blaze on container ship docked at LA port
LOS ANGELES (AP) — Dozens of firefighters were battling a blaze on a container ship docked at a Los Angeles port on Friday night, according to officials. All of the 23 crew members were accounted for and there were no injuries from the electrical fire, which appears to have started below deck, according to the Los Angeles Fire Department. The ship's cargo includes hazardous materials. By about 7 p. m. , the fire had spread to several levels of the ship, according to the fire department, and...
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- Dozens of firefighters battle blaze on container ship docked at LA port
- Epstein's accusers grapple with complex emotions about promised release of Justice Department files
- A man has been shot and killed after wielding a knife at St. Louis airport, police say
- Federal prosecutors say 2 Texas men made plans to take over a Haitian island
- Florida eviction turns deadly as a deputy is killed, shooter and 2 others wounded
Trump paints Zelenskyy into a corner with his new plan to end Russia's war on Ukraine
WASHINGTON (AP) — With his new 28-point plan to end Russia’s war in Ukraine, President Donald Trump is resurfacing his argument that Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy doesn't “have the cards” to continue on the battlefield and must come to a settlement that heavily tilts in Moscow's favor. Trump, who has demonstrated low regard for Zelenskyy dating back to his first term, said Friday he expects the Ukrainian leader to respond to his administration's new plan to end the war by we...
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- Trump paints Zelenskyy into a corner with his new plan to end Russia's war on Ukraine
- Republicans hyped the Epstein files for years. Now Trump is under pressure to deliver
- Marjorie Taylor Greene is resigning. Here's what to know about her five years in Congress
- Trump says he's terminating legal protections for Somali migrants in Minnesota
- Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia, former Trump loyalist, says she is resigning from Congress
A drying-up Rio Grande basin threatens water security on both sides of the border
ALBUQUERQUE, N. M. (AP) — One of North America's longest rivers, the Rio Grande — or Rio Bravo as it's called in Mexico — has a history as deep as it is long. Indigenous people have tapped it for countless generations, and it was a key artery for Spanish conquistadors centuries ago. Today, the Rio Grande-Bravo water basin is in crisis. Research published Thursday says the situation arguably is worse than challenges facing the Colorado River, another vital lifeline for western U. S. that...
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- A drying-up Rio Grande basin threatens water security on both sides of the border
- Colombian scientists recover cannon, coins and porcelain cup from 300-year-old Spanish shipwreck
- K-pop fans' environmental activism comes to UN climate talks
- NASA unveils close-up pictures of the comet popping by from another star
- Brazil's Lula joins negotiators at UN climate talks, but no deal yet on major issues

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