
85-year-old French widow caught in Trumps immigration crackdown describes her detention
ORVAULT, France (AP) — At night, silence fell over the Louisiana immigration detention facility where 85-year-old Marie-Thérèse Ross was held. Then the wailing began. ’’Children crying, and even babies,” said Ross, the French widow of a U. S. military veteran, whose arrest last month as part of the Trump administration’s i mmigration crackdown made international headlines. Ross spoke to The Associated Press on Monday about her 16 days in federal immigration custody after being on 1...
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- 85-year-old French widow caught in Trumps immigration crackdown describes her detention
- Sons of Utah author convicted of murder worry their mother would hurt them if she was ever freed
- Men wrongly accused of grisly yogurt shop murders in Texas reach $35 million settlement with city
- Cruise ship passenger making best of quarantine in US following hantavirus outbreak
- Weinstein defense urges acquittal as prosecutors seek to revive a #MeToo-era rape conviction
In diplomacy, pomp and protocol matter, especially when Trump goes to China
WASHINGTON (AP) — From the moment President Donald Trump lands in Beijing on Wednesday, all eyes will be on how much of a spectacle the Chinese government rolls out, such as who lines up to greet him, what music is played and whether Chinese and American children wave flowers and flags. In China's rigidly hierarchical world of diplomacy, protocol and ceremony carry weight. The reception of Trump is shaping up to be warm and designed to flatter him, indicative of Beijing's tactical approach a...
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- In diplomacy, pomp and protocol matter, especially when Trump goes to China
- As Trump heads to China, past US flubs on US policy toward Taiwan can be a warning
- Trump set to meet with Xi in Beijing as war and inflation weigh on his presidency
- Trumps FDA chief is out after angering pharma CEOs, vaping lobbyists and anti-abortion activists
- The Latest: Trump departs for high-stakes China summit as Iran war looms
Neil deGrasse Tyson takes on aliens and how we should greet them in Take Me to Your Leader
NEW YORK (AP) — Neil deGrasse Tyson has had a lifelong fantasy of being abducted by aliens. That's right, he actually wants to be taken. “I even picture the scenario in my head: I’m sitting out there alone, and a beam of light comes down,” he says. “It’s not a spacecraft that’s hovering over me. It’s just a beam of light from space. And I just get lifted up into that beam of light, and I appear in a new place. ”America’s favorite astrophysicist has turned that lifelong into...
Read MoreScience News
- Neil deGrasse Tyson takes on aliens and how we should greet them in Take Me to Your Leader
- One evacuated passenger tests positive for hantavirus and another develops symptoms on flight home
- WHO head seeks to reassure residents of Spanish island where hantavirus-stricken ship is headed
- Bright lights and hot orbs: UFO files shed light on sightings but leave interpretation to the public
- Spiral galaxys brilliant heart shines bright in a new picture from NASAs Webb telescope

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