21 minutes

With the sudden resignation of U.S. Attorney Kurt Alme on Wednesday in order to run for Republican Steve Daines’ seat in the U.S. Senate, First Assistant U.S. Attorney Tim Racicot is acting in the top law enforcement role for the state, according to the U.S. Attorney’s website. Racicot was named in the acting position for […]

With the sudden resignation of U.S. Attorney Kurt Alme on Wednesday in order to run for Republican Steve Daines’ seat in the U.S. Senate, First Assistant U.S. Attorney Tim Racicot is acting in the top law enforcement role for the state, according to the U.S. Attorney’s website. Racicot was named in the acting position for […]
23 minutes
Di rojên dawî de Amerîka û Îsraîlê bi berdewamî êrîşî hêzên rejîma Îranê kirine, di nav de baregehên hêzên Pasdarên Şoreşê yên li bajar û gundên Kurdistanê. Li gor çavkanîyên Dengê Amerîka, hin ji van baregehan bi tevahî hatine wêrankirin. Cihên ku bi mûşekan hatine armanckirin ev in: Wirmê: Du bingehên polîsê bajarê Wirmê.Hêzên piyade yên bajarî ser sînor.Bingeha Pasdaran li gundê Nazlo.Bingeha Melîk Eştar.Bingeha Mehdî.Bingeha Hêzên Pasdaran.Bingehên devera Sêro Gûrdanî li nêzêk bajarê...
23 minutes
Di rojên dawî de Amerîka û Îsraîlê bi berdewamî êrîşî hêzên rejîma Îranê kirine, di nav de baregehên hêzên Pasdarên Şoreşê yên li bajar û gundên Kurdistanê. Li gor çavkanîyên Dengê Amerîka, hin ji van baregehan bi tevahî hatine wêrankirin. Cihên ku bi mûşekan hatine armanckirin ev in: Wirmê: Du bingehên polîsê bajarê Wirmê.Hêzên piyade yên bajarî ser sînor.Bingeha Pasdaran li gundê Nazlo.Bingeha Melîk Eştar.Bingeha Mehdî.Bingeha Hêzên Pasdaran.Bingehên devera Sêro Gûrdanî li nêzêk bajarê...
23 minutes
In Minneapolis, heightened immigration enforcement is disrupting HIV care for Latino communities, a group already disproportionately affected by the virus.
In Minneapolis, heightened immigration enforcement is disrupting HIV care for Latino communities, a group already disproportionately affected by the virus.
24 minutes

Ky nuk është rrëfimi i Romeos dhe Zhulietës, as i Kajsit dhe Lejlës. Ajo që dua t’ju tregoj është historia më e mrekullueshme e dashurisë, që ekziston që nga krijimi i njeriut të parë. Ndoshta mendoni se ç’lidhje ka kjo me Islamin, por ky rrëfim përcakton vetë konceptin e dashurisë. Ndryshe nga personazhet e letërsisë […]

Ky nuk është rrëfimi i Romeos dhe Zhulietës, as i Kajsit dhe Lejlës. Ajo që dua t’ju tregoj është historia më e mrekullueshme e dashurisë, që ekziston që nga krijimi i njeriut të parë. Ndoshta mendoni se ç’lidhje ka kjo me Islamin, por ky rrëfim përcakton vetë konceptin e dashurisë. Ndryshe nga personazhet e letërsisë […]
24 minutes
California Highway Patrol officers and CalFire firefighters are asking the state for a new retirement option that would complement their CalPERS pensions.
California Highway Patrol officers and CalFire firefighters are asking the state for a new retirement option that would complement their CalPERS pensions.
28 minutes
FAFAN reúne teatro, cinema, literatura e música na Funarte até 15 de março Fonte
FAFAN reúne teatro, cinema, literatura e música na Funarte até 15 de março Fonte
28 minutes
O suposto uso de inteligência artificial para selecionar alvos e lançar ataques contra o Irã levanta inúmeras questões, alimentando temores de uma erosão do controle humano sobre a máquina de guerra, de acordo com um especialista em IA.
O suposto uso de inteligência artificial para selecionar alvos e lançar ataques contra o Irã levanta inúmeras questões, alimentando temores de uma erosão do controle humano sobre a máquina de guerra, de acordo com um especialista em IA.
28 minutes
(The Center Square) – A Wisconsin lawmaker charged with disorderly conduct is scheduled to have her initial court appearance Friday afternoon in Milwaukee County where several judges will be recused from the case. Sylvia Ortiz-Velez, a Democrat who is not part of the caucus, was charged after a Sept. 2 phone call where she reportedly threatened another member of the Assembly that she would “tell the press negative personal information” if she was not included in writing a Joint Resolution honoring Latino veterans. Ortiz-Velez left the caucus after the incident. The charge is a misdemeanor that could lead up to a $1,000 fine and up to 90 days in jail. Ortiz-Velez’s attorney, Michael Chernin, told The Center Square on Thursday that he could not comment on the case before it was completed. The complaint states that Ortiz-Velez felt she was intentionally left out of writing the resolution despite the fact that her late husband was a Latino veteran. The complaint was filed in Milwaukee because both representatives live in Milwaukee and both were in Milwaukee when the phone call occurred. “These were personal attacks regarding Witness 1 that were outside the bounds of political response,” the complaint said. “The statements were indecent and tended to disrupt the good public order.” Rep. Jim Piwowarczyk, R-Hubertus, wrote that he was denied the records when he sent a public records request to the state's Department of Administration for Capitol Police records related to the incident because the "continued confidentiality is material to that prosecution and release would harm the prosecution."
(The Center Square) – A Wisconsin lawmaker charged with disorderly conduct is scheduled to have her initial court appearance Friday afternoon in Milwaukee County where several judges will be recused from the case. Sylvia Ortiz-Velez, a Democrat who is not part of the caucus, was charged after a Sept. 2 phone call where she reportedly threatened another member of the Assembly that she would “tell the press negative personal information” if she was not included in writing a Joint Resolution honoring Latino veterans. Ortiz-Velez left the caucus after the incident. The charge is a misdemeanor that could lead up to a $1,000 fine and up to 90 days in jail. Ortiz-Velez’s attorney, Michael Chernin, told The Center Square on Thursday that he could not comment on the case before it was completed. The complaint states that Ortiz-Velez felt she was intentionally left out of writing the resolution despite the fact that her late husband was a Latino veteran. The complaint was filed in Milwaukee because both representatives live in Milwaukee and both were in Milwaukee when the phone call occurred. “These were personal attacks regarding Witness 1 that were outside the bounds of political response,” the complaint said. “The statements were indecent and tended to disrupt the good public order.” Rep. Jim Piwowarczyk, R-Hubertus, wrote that he was denied the records when he sent a public records request to the state's Department of Administration for Capitol Police records related to the incident because the "continued confidentiality is material to that prosecution and release would harm the prosecution."
29 minutes
29 minutes
«Немислимо, щоб він був перешкодою. У вас немає карт. Тепер у нього ще менше карт», – повторив Трамп тезу, яку раніше вже виголошував
«Немислимо, щоб він був перешкодою. У вас немає карт. Тепер у нього ще менше карт», – повторив Трамп тезу, яку раніше вже виголошував
29 minutes
Sign up for Chalkbeat New York’s free daily newsletter to get essential news about NYC’s public schools delivered to your inbox.New York City schools Chancellor Kamar Samuels announced his top deputies Thursday, replacing some of the system’s top leaders while keeping several others.Of his 11 cabinet members, all have deep roots in the nation’s largest school system — and six are staying in the roles they assumed under the previous administration.Samuels named Danielle Giunta as first deputy. She will helm his cabinet and oversee a slew of key areas, ranging from academics to district leadership, including managing two newly created roles of supervising superintendents. One will supervise elementary and middle school superintendents and another will oversee high schools and alternative program superintendents. “I spent two decades of my career in roles across NYC public schools — from math teacher to principal to superintendent — and I’ve seen many iterations of our organizational chart, iterations that often lacked cohesion, efficiency, and clarity,” Samuels told a packed audience at the Education Department’s Lower Manhattan headquarters. “I needed to make some structural changes.”The changes Samuels announced on Thursday do not completely overhaul the system’s leadership. Simone Hawkins, the deputy chancellor of early childhood education, will keep her position — a key post as Mayor Zohran Mamdani prioritizes universal child care and shoring up the prekindergarten system. Kenita Lloyd will stay in her role as chief of staff, which she held under former chancellors Melissa Aviles-Ramos and David Banks. She previously worked with Banks to support the Eagle Academy network of public schools, which he helped launch.Lloyd compared herself to a professional basketball player changing teams. “The coaching philosophy shifts, culture evolves, and expectations have risen, yet the responsibility remains the same,” she said. “Elevate performance, protect the star, and help the team win.”It remains to be seen whether Samuels will make other structural changes. Former Chancellor Richard Carranza added a new layer of executive superintendents. Banks scrapped those positions and required all of the city’s local superintendents to reapply for their jobs. Here are the new faces in Samuels’ cabinet.First Deputy Chancellor: Danielle GiuntaAs first deputy, Giunta will oversee district planning, enrollment, new school development, and policy as well as academics and instruction, with the two supervising superintendents, one for elementary and middle school, and the other for high school and alternative programs, reporting directly to her. Giunta most recently served as the chief of school leadership development, tapped by Banks to fill that new role. Prior to that she spent about a decade as the superintendent of District 26, a high-performing and affluent part of Queens that includes Bayside, Douglaston, and Little Neck. She was a principal at P.S. 154 in Flushing.Supervising Superintendent of Elementary and Middle Schools: Maribel Torres-Hulla Supervising Superintendent of High Schools and D79: Alan ChengIn these newly created roles, Torres-Hulla and Cheng will oversee the implementation of the city’s curriculum mandates, NYC Reads for literacy and NYC Solves for math. They will oversee work around career readiness and apprenticeship programs. And as the state is changing graduation requirements, the high school supervising superintendent will have a massive job helping schools figure out how to shift their practices. Torres-Hulla, born in the Bronx and raised in Brooklyn, rose through the ranks from elementary school teacher to literacy coach, assistant principal, principal, deputy superintendent, and superintendent of the Bronx’s District 10. Most recently, she served as chief of school support, working with superintendents of 18 local school districts across Brooklyn and the Bronx to help them align instruction with citywide initiatives. Cheng’s career has had a similar trajectory, starting as a math teacher and working his way up as a principal, deputy superintendent, and superintendent. He most recently has served as senior supervising superintendent of high schools and District 79, which include alternative programs such as those in hospital settings, juvenile justice, or adult education.His high school portfolio included international schools — serving newcomer immigrants — and consortium schools, which require students to do performance-based assessments, such as capstone projects or other presentations rather than Regents exit exams, potentially serving as a model as the state overhauls graduation requirements. Former Deputy Chancellor for School Leadership Danika Rux previously oversaw all superintendents; she will no longer have a cabinet position and will advise the office of the general counsel. Samuels, who previously served two tours as local superintendent in Manhattan and Brooklyn, said the new roles are meant to help support superintendents as they navigate reading and math curriculum overhauls and implement a new set of graduation standards in the coming years. Deputy Chancellor of the Division of Family Partnership & Community Support: Flavia Puello-PerdomoAttendance, students in temporary housing and foster care, language access, school wellness and counseling programs, and community schools providing wraparound support will be among the areas that Puello-Perdomo will oversee. She will also be in charge of Family and Community Empowerment, or FACE, the office that supports parent leaders on parent-teacher associations, school leadership teams, and Community Education Councils — along with running the elections for these councils, which have been plagued by low turnout. Puello-Perdomo most recently served as the chief of schools for the office of community supports and wellness where she worked across agencies to support community school programs, students in temporary housing and foster care, after-school, and summer programs. She also focused on attendance initiatives. Deputy Chancellor of the Division of Finance, Administration, & Human Resources: Michael Cheatham will serve as acting deputy chancellor until June, when Lindsey Oates takes overThis role will be responsible for administrative services, finance, human resources, and procurement. Cheatham previously served as a senior advisor to the chancellor and chief financial officer and as senior executive director and acting chief of finance and human resources for the Division of School Leadership. He’s currently also the Education Department’s interim chief savings officer, a role Mamdani established to find cost-efficiency strategies.Oates previously served as the Education Department’s chief financial officer during the de Blasio administration. She’s currently the interim chief financial officer at the Legal Aid Society. Here’s who is returning to their former post.Chief of Staff Kenita Lloyd. Lloyd joined the Education Department as a deputy chancellor of family engagement under Banks. She was elevated to the chief of staff role in 2024, and Samuels is keeping her in that role.Deputy Chancellor of the Division of Inclusive and Accessible Learning Christina Foti. The division oversees special education, multilingual learners, and District 75, a network of schools that serve students with more significant disabilities. Deputy Chancellor of the Division of Early Childhood Education Simone HawkinsDeputy Chancellor of the Division of School Operations Kevin MoranChief of Safety and Prevention Partnerships Mark Rampersant Chief Legal Officer and General Counsel Liz VladeckAlex Zimmerman is a reporter for Chalkbeat New York, covering NYC public schools. Contact Alex at azimmerman@chalkbeat.org.Amy Zimmer is the bureau chief for Chalkbeat New York. Contact Amy at azimmer@chalkbeat.org.
Sign up for Chalkbeat New York’s free daily newsletter to get essential news about NYC’s public schools delivered to your inbox.New York City schools Chancellor Kamar Samuels announced his top deputies Thursday, replacing some of the system’s top leaders while keeping several others.Of his 11 cabinet members, all have deep roots in the nation’s largest school system — and six are staying in the roles they assumed under the previous administration.Samuels named Danielle Giunta as first deputy. She will helm his cabinet and oversee a slew of key areas, ranging from academics to district leadership, including managing two newly created roles of supervising superintendents. One will supervise elementary and middle school superintendents and another will oversee high schools and alternative program superintendents. “I spent two decades of my career in roles across NYC public schools — from math teacher to principal to superintendent — and I’ve seen many iterations of our organizational chart, iterations that often lacked cohesion, efficiency, and clarity,” Samuels told a packed audience at the Education Department’s Lower Manhattan headquarters. “I needed to make some structural changes.”The changes Samuels announced on Thursday do not completely overhaul the system’s leadership. Simone Hawkins, the deputy chancellor of early childhood education, will keep her position — a key post as Mayor Zohran Mamdani prioritizes universal child care and shoring up the prekindergarten system. Kenita Lloyd will stay in her role as chief of staff, which she held under former chancellors Melissa Aviles-Ramos and David Banks. She previously worked with Banks to support the Eagle Academy network of public schools, which he helped launch.Lloyd compared herself to a professional basketball player changing teams. “The coaching philosophy shifts, culture evolves, and expectations have risen, yet the responsibility remains the same,” she said. “Elevate performance, protect the star, and help the team win.”It remains to be seen whether Samuels will make other structural changes. Former Chancellor Richard Carranza added a new layer of executive superintendents. Banks scrapped those positions and required all of the city’s local superintendents to reapply for their jobs. Here are the new faces in Samuels’ cabinet.First Deputy Chancellor: Danielle GiuntaAs first deputy, Giunta will oversee district planning, enrollment, new school development, and policy as well as academics and instruction, with the two supervising superintendents, one for elementary and middle school, and the other for high school and alternative programs, reporting directly to her. Giunta most recently served as the chief of school leadership development, tapped by Banks to fill that new role. Prior to that she spent about a decade as the superintendent of District 26, a high-performing and affluent part of Queens that includes Bayside, Douglaston, and Little Neck. She was a principal at P.S. 154 in Flushing.Supervising Superintendent of Elementary and Middle Schools: Maribel Torres-Hulla Supervising Superintendent of High Schools and D79: Alan ChengIn these newly created roles, Torres-Hulla and Cheng will oversee the implementation of the city’s curriculum mandates, NYC Reads for literacy and NYC Solves for math. They will oversee work around career readiness and apprenticeship programs. And as the state is changing graduation requirements, the high school supervising superintendent will have a massive job helping schools figure out how to shift their practices. Torres-Hulla, born in the Bronx and raised in Brooklyn, rose through the ranks from elementary school teacher to literacy coach, assistant principal, principal, deputy superintendent, and superintendent of the Bronx’s District 10. Most recently, she served as chief of school support, working with superintendents of 18 local school districts across Brooklyn and the Bronx to help them align instruction with citywide initiatives. Cheng’s career has had a similar trajectory, starting as a math teacher and working his way up as a principal, deputy superintendent, and superintendent. He most recently has served as senior supervising superintendent of high schools and District 79, which include alternative programs such as those in hospital settings, juvenile justice, or adult education.His high school portfolio included international schools — serving newcomer immigrants — and consortium schools, which require students to do performance-based assessments, such as capstone projects or other presentations rather than Regents exit exams, potentially serving as a model as the state overhauls graduation requirements. Former Deputy Chancellor for School Leadership Danika Rux previously oversaw all superintendents; she will no longer have a cabinet position and will advise the office of the general counsel. Samuels, who previously served two tours as local superintendent in Manhattan and Brooklyn, said the new roles are meant to help support superintendents as they navigate reading and math curriculum overhauls and implement a new set of graduation standards in the coming years. Deputy Chancellor of the Division of Family Partnership & Community Support: Flavia Puello-PerdomoAttendance, students in temporary housing and foster care, language access, school wellness and counseling programs, and community schools providing wraparound support will be among the areas that Puello-Perdomo will oversee. She will also be in charge of Family and Community Empowerment, or FACE, the office that supports parent leaders on parent-teacher associations, school leadership teams, and Community Education Councils — along with running the elections for these councils, which have been plagued by low turnout. Puello-Perdomo most recently served as the chief of schools for the office of community supports and wellness where she worked across agencies to support community school programs, students in temporary housing and foster care, after-school, and summer programs. She also focused on attendance initiatives. Deputy Chancellor of the Division of Finance, Administration, & Human Resources: Michael Cheatham will serve as acting deputy chancellor until June, when Lindsey Oates takes overThis role will be responsible for administrative services, finance, human resources, and procurement. Cheatham previously served as a senior advisor to the chancellor and chief financial officer and as senior executive director and acting chief of finance and human resources for the Division of School Leadership. He’s currently also the Education Department’s interim chief savings officer, a role Mamdani established to find cost-efficiency strategies.Oates previously served as the Education Department’s chief financial officer during the de Blasio administration. She’s currently the interim chief financial officer at the Legal Aid Society. Here’s who is returning to their former post.Chief of Staff Kenita Lloyd. Lloyd joined the Education Department as a deputy chancellor of family engagement under Banks. She was elevated to the chief of staff role in 2024, and Samuels is keeping her in that role.Deputy Chancellor of the Division of Inclusive and Accessible Learning Christina Foti. The division oversees special education, multilingual learners, and District 75, a network of schools that serve students with more significant disabilities. Deputy Chancellor of the Division of Early Childhood Education Simone HawkinsDeputy Chancellor of the Division of School Operations Kevin MoranChief of Safety and Prevention Partnerships Mark Rampersant Chief Legal Officer and General Counsel Liz VladeckAlex Zimmerman is a reporter for Chalkbeat New York, covering NYC public schools. Contact Alex at azimmerman@chalkbeat.org.Amy Zimmer is the bureau chief for Chalkbeat New York. Contact Amy at azimmer@chalkbeat.org.
30 minutes
Movimentos socioambientais e moradores do Distrito Federal realizam, neste domingo (8), um ato em defesa da Serrinha do Paranoá. A mobilização, marcada para às 10h no Espaço Comunitário do Urubu, é uma resposta à aprovação do Projeto de Lei nº 2.175/2026, que autoriza o uso de 716 hectares da região chamada Gleba “A” para reforçar […] Fonte
30 minutes
Movimentos socioambientais e moradores do Distrito Federal realizam, neste domingo (8), um ato em defesa da Serrinha do Paranoá. A mobilização, marcada para às 10h no Espaço Comunitário do Urubu, é uma resposta à aprovação do Projeto de Lei nº 2.175/2026, que autoriza o uso de 716 hectares da região chamada Gleba “A” para reforçar […] Fonte
30 minutes

Gov. Kim Reynolds said Thursday she supports the U.S. military action in Iran, as she mourned the loss of two Iowa soldiers in an Iranian strike on a Kuwait facility on March 1. Two of the six U.S. military members killed in the Iran attack on a tactical operations center in Kuwait’s Port of Shuaiba […]

Gov. Kim Reynolds said Thursday she supports the U.S. military action in Iran, as she mourned the loss of two Iowa soldiers in an Iranian strike on a Kuwait facility on March 1. Two of the six U.S. military members killed in the Iran attack on a tactical operations center in Kuwait’s Port of Shuaiba […]
32 minutes
The United States has asked Ukraine for help fending off Iranian Shahed drones in the Middle East, President Volodymyr Zelensky said on Thursday.
The United States has asked Ukraine for help fending off Iranian Shahed drones in the Middle East, President Volodymyr Zelensky said on Thursday.
33 minutes

Noches de neón, mito y escándalo en la ciudad que nunca dormía.

Noches de neón, mito y escándalo en la ciudad que nunca dormía.
33 minutes

Kryeministrja italiane, Giorgia Meloni, ka reaguar ashpër ndaj vendimit të Gjykatës së Apelit të Romës lidhur me rastin e shtetasit maroken 39-vjeçar, Fathalla Ouardi, i cili sipas saj ka një histori kriminale që përfshin trafik droge, dhunë seksuale dhe përdhunim në grup, raporton Klan. Ky shtetas maroken ishte transferuar më 17 shkurt nga Potenza drejt […]

Kryeministrja italiane, Giorgia Meloni, ka reaguar ashpër ndaj vendimit të Gjykatës së Apelit të Romës lidhur me rastin e shtetasit maroken 39-vjeçar, Fathalla Ouardi, i cili sipas saj ka një histori kriminale që përfshin trafik droge, dhunë seksuale dhe përdhunim në grup, raporton Klan. Ky shtetas maroken ishte transferuar më 17 shkurt nga Potenza drejt […]
33 minutes
В Тракторозаводский районный суд Волгограда поступило уголовное дело против 64-летнего частного детектива Виктора Жилкова, которого обвиняют в незаконном получении персональных данных — так называемом "пробиве". На карточку дела на сайте суда обратила внимание "Медиазона". Оно ведётся по статьям о превышении полномочий частным детективом, незаконном сборе персональных данных в корыстных целях и воспрепятствовании следствию. Максимальное наказание по самой тяжкой из этих статей составляет...
В Тракторозаводский районный суд Волгограда поступило уголовное дело против 64-летнего частного детектива Виктора Жилкова, которого обвиняют в незаконном получении персональных данных — так называемом "пробиве". На карточку дела на сайте суда обратила внимание "Медиазона". Оно ведётся по статьям о превышении полномочий частным детективом, незаконном сборе персональных данных в корыстных целях и воспрепятствовании следствию. Максимальное наказание по самой тяжкой из этих статей составляет...
33 minutes
Против него возбуждено уголовное дело по ряду статей, в том числе о создании преступного сообщества
Против него возбуждено уголовное дело по ряду статей, в том числе о создании преступного сообщества
34 minutes
After the Supreme Court tariff opinion, Learning Resources v. Trump (Feb. 20, 2026), and President Trump’s rebuttal press conference, I believe I know what lesson we are being forced to relearn about our Constitution and democracy, especially in the context of the upcoming 2026 midterm elections: SCOTUS gave us a constitutional tutorial on the separation […] The post Robert Sulnick: US Supreme Court tariff ruling is a civics lesson for midterms appeared first on Santa Barbara News-Press.
After the Supreme Court tariff opinion, Learning Resources v. Trump (Feb. 20, 2026), and President Trump’s rebuttal press conference, I believe I know what lesson we are being forced to relearn about our Constitution and democracy, especially in the context of the upcoming 2026 midterm elections: SCOTUS gave us a constitutional tutorial on the separation […] The post Robert Sulnick: US Supreme Court tariff ruling is a civics lesson for midterms appeared first on Santa Barbara News-Press.
34 minutes

Ecologistas en Acción y Greenpeace España firman una tribuna conjunta en la que apuestan por un 8-M antifascista que señale «los grandes proyectos del capital como promotores de este proceso de destrucción» de la Tierra, los derechos y la igualdad. La entrada No hay transición ecosocial sin ecofeminismos se publicó primero en lamarea.com.

Ecologistas en Acción y Greenpeace España firman una tribuna conjunta en la que apuestan por un 8-M antifascista que señale «los grandes proyectos del capital como promotores de este proceso de destrucción» de la Tierra, los derechos y la igualdad. La entrada No hay transición ecosocial sin ecofeminismos se publicó primero en lamarea.com.