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Parents and kids navigate talks of loss and tragedy as they return home after LA area fires
LOS ANGELES (AP) — Ceiba Phillips, 11, couldn't believe what he saw when he returned to his Southern California neighborhood a month after a wildfire reduced it to rubble. The ruins of his best friend’s house and his beloved school. His house survived, but the backhouse where his grandparents lived and packed him lunch every morning was reduced to ashes and a silver pool of melted aluminum. His favorite cozy diner, Fox's, was decimated. Seeing it in person — after seeing it through — a...
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- Parents and kids navigate talks of loss and tragedy as they return home after LA area fires
- AP sues 3 Trump administration officials, citing freedom of speech
- Judge upholds ban on DOGE accessing sensitive Treasury information, for now
- Woman accused of drugging and robbing older men in a deadly romance scheme
- 3 shot and killed outside Louisville, Kentucky, motor vehicle office, police say
After years of firm support, 10 days upended the US approach to Ukraine
KYIV, Ukraine (AP) — As Ukraine approached the three-year mark of Russia’s full-scale invasion, the country’s hoped-for path to a favorable and lasting peace was upended in a matter of days by the administration of U. S. President Donald Trump. Kyiv had benefited from years of staunch support by its allies in the United States and Europe which had provided crucial military and financial support to help defend against Moscow’s grinding incursions. But when Trump held a lengthy phone —...
Read MorePolitics
- After years of firm support, 10 days upended the US approach to Ukraine
- White House and Ukraine nearing rare earths deal that would tighten relationship, AP source says
- AP sues 3 Trump administration officials, citing freedom of speech
- Trump fires chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff and two other military officers
- Judge largely blocks Trumps executive orders ending federal support for DEI programs
Climate change is shrinking glaciers faster than ever, with 7 trillion tons lost since 2000
Climate change is accelerating the melting of the world's mountain glaciers, according to a massive new study that found them shrinking more than twice as fast as in the early 2000s. The world's glaciers lost ice at the rate of about 255 billion tons (231 billion metric tons) annual from 2000 to 2011, but that quickened to about 346 billion tons (314 billion metric tons) annually over about the next decade, according to the study in this week’s journal Nature. And the last few years, the has...
Read MoreScience News
- Climate change is shrinking glaciers faster than ever, with 7 trillion tons lost since 2000
- In its 10th episode, Kilauea, one of the world's most active volcanoes, is again spewing lava
- Experts give up hope for 157 false killer whales stranded on a beach in Australia's Tasmania state
- Sea turtles return to the Atlantic Ocean off Florida after being stunned by the cold
- Researchers link a gene to the emergence of spoken language