7 minutes

Azat Ýewropa we Azatlyk Radiosy
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Aşgabadyň etegindäki ilatly ýerlerde ýaşaýyş jaýlar ýumrulýar. Änew we Gämi ilatly ýerlere degişli daça ýerlerinde jaýlaryň ençemesi ýumruldy. Ýerli ýaşaýjylara göçmek üçin örän az wagt berlipdir. Adamlara göçmäge diňe iki gün berildi diýip ýerli ýaşaýjylar gürrüň berdi. "Zir-zöwrançylyk. Adamlar goşlaryny zordan alyp ýetişýärler" diýip, bu ýagdaýy gören ýerli çeşmeleriň biri 3-nji maýda gürrüň berdi. "Haçan üstümize gelende şonda göçeris diýip, goşlaryny düwüp, garyndaşlaryna ugradan we...

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Azat Ýewropa we Azatlyk Radiosy
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Aşgabadyň etegindäki ilatly ýerlerde ýaşaýyş jaýlar ýumrulýar. Änew we Gämi ilatly ýerlere degişli daça ýerlerinde jaýlaryň ençemesi ýumruldy. Ýerli ýaşaýjylara göçmek üçin örän az wagt berlipdir. Adamlara göçmäge diňe iki gün berildi diýip ýerli ýaşaýjylar gürrüň berdi. "Zir-zöwrançylyk. Adamlar goşlaryny zordan alyp ýetişýärler" diýip, bu ýagdaýy gören ýerli çeşmeleriň biri 3-nji maýda gürrüň berdi. "Haçan üstümize gelende şonda göçeris diýip, goşlaryny düwüp, garyndaşlaryna ugradan we...

9 minutes

Melting Pot Europa
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EVA CASTELLETTI L’indagine su Fabrice Leggeri apre per la prima volta uno spiraglio su un’agenzia che ha fatto dei respingimenti la propria politica. Nel frattempo, però, l’Europa si prepara a darle ancora più poteri. Fabrice Leggeri, ex direttore esecutivo di Frontex, è indagato in Francia per complicità in crimini contro l’umanità e tortura. Il 18 marzo, la Corte d’Appello di Parigi ha aperto formalmente l’inchiesta, accogliendo una denuncia presentata due anni prima dalla Ligue des droits de l’homme (LDH) e Utopia 56. Le due organizzazioni lo accusano di aver facilitato, attraverso i suoi agenti, l’intercettazione di imbarcazioni di migranti da parte delle autorità

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Melting Pot Europa
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EVA CASTELLETTI L’indagine su Fabrice Leggeri apre per la prima volta uno spiraglio su un’agenzia che ha fatto dei respingimenti la propria politica. Nel frattempo, però, l’Europa si prepara a darle ancora più poteri. Fabrice Leggeri, ex direttore esecutivo di Frontex, è indagato in Francia per complicità in crimini contro l’umanità e tortura. Il 18 marzo, la Corte d’Appello di Parigi ha aperto formalmente l’inchiesta, accogliendo una denuncia presentata due anni prima dalla Ligue des droits de l’homme (LDH) e Utopia 56. Le due organizzazioni lo accusano di aver facilitato, attraverso i suoi agenti, l’intercettazione di imbarcazioni di migranti da parte delle autorità

DETROIT — Momentous wins from progressive candidates like New York’s Zohran Mamdani show U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont, the movement’s leading voice, that a progressive candidate like Abdul El-Sayed can win the August primary and the Michigan general election come November. That was the message that Sanders shared with an energetic crowd while in […]

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Michigan Advance
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DETROIT — Momentous wins from progressive candidates like New York’s Zohran Mamdani show U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont, the movement’s leading voice, that a progressive candidate like Abdul El-Sayed can win the August primary and the Michigan general election come November. That was the message that Sanders shared with an energetic crowd while in […]

MACKINAW CITY — While Michigan Republicans from the Straits area enjoyed a packed house at their annual Lincoln Day dinner event Friday, several schisms within the party were on full display. The largest of those was the dynamic playing out in the gubernatorial contest between the insurgent and ascending Perry Johnson and U.S. Rep. John […]

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Michigan Advance
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MACKINAW CITY — While Michigan Republicans from the Straits area enjoyed a packed house at their annual Lincoln Day dinner event Friday, several schisms within the party were on full display. The largest of those was the dynamic playing out in the gubernatorial contest between the insurgent and ascending Perry Johnson and U.S. Rep. John […]

11 minutes

North Dakota Monitor
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Available housing is so scarce in Lakota, North Dakota, that people call city officials to ask for leads. “We get calls all the time about housing availability, rentals, ownership,” said Amie Vasichek, city auditor for the town of almost 700. In Hoople, a town of around 200 an hour north of Lakota, officials also field […]

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North Dakota Monitor
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Available housing is so scarce in Lakota, North Dakota, that people call city officials to ask for leads. “We get calls all the time about housing availability, rentals, ownership,” said Amie Vasichek, city auditor for the town of almost 700. In Hoople, a town of around 200 an hour north of Lakota, officials also field […]

Responding to President Donald Trump’s pressure, Tennessee Gov. Bill Lee has called a special session to redraw the state’s U.S. House map as the party tries to eliminate the only Democratic-held seat in Memphis. Lee is calling on state lawmakers to return to the state Capitol on May 5 to pass a new Tennessee U.S. […]

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Wisconsin Examiner
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Responding to President Donald Trump’s pressure, Tennessee Gov. Bill Lee has called a special session to redraw the state’s U.S. House map as the party tries to eliminate the only Democratic-held seat in Memphis. Lee is calling on state lawmakers to return to the state Capitol on May 5 to pass a new Tennessee U.S. […]

11 minutes

North Dakota Monitor
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North Dakota researchers believe fracking technology could be the key to introducing geothermal energy to the state’s electrical grid, but cautioned there are still many unknowns about its feasibility.  One of those unknowns is whether new geothermal technologies under development will prove to be cost-effective enough in North Dakota’s underground rock formations, according to a […]

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North Dakota Monitor
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North Dakota researchers believe fracking technology could be the key to introducing geothermal energy to the state’s electrical grid, but cautioned there are still many unknowns about its feasibility.  One of those unknowns is whether new geothermal technologies under development will prove to be cost-effective enough in North Dakota’s underground rock formations, according to a […]

An incentive fund that was created nearly two decades ago to lure business to Arkansas is playing a key role in efforts to land a new manufacturing facility in West Memphis. The $6.7 billion budget Arkansas lawmakers approved last week includes plans to tap up to $300 million from the state’s surplus to land a […]

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Arkansas Advocate
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An incentive fund that was created nearly two decades ago to lure business to Arkansas is playing a key role in efforts to land a new manufacturing facility in West Memphis. The $6.7 billion budget Arkansas lawmakers approved last week includes plans to tap up to $300 million from the state’s surplus to land a […]

Concentration camps, often associated with Nazi killing centers, existed before WWII in several countries.

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The Marshall Project
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Concentration camps, often associated with Nazi killing centers, existed before WWII in several countries.

12 minutes

West Virginia Watch
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In the May primary election, West Virginia voters will find many familiar names on the ballot, including incumbents looking to keep their seat in the Legislature and lawmakers trying to switch chambers. However, a number of people are running for office for the first time.  West Virginia Watch reached out to four first-time Republican and […]

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West Virginia Watch
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In the May primary election, West Virginia voters will find many familiar names on the ballot, including incumbents looking to keep their seat in the Legislature and lawmakers trying to switch chambers. However, a number of people are running for office for the first time.  West Virginia Watch reached out to four first-time Republican and […]

Власти Франции санкционировали полный демонтаж бывшей атомной электростанции в Фессенхайме (Верхний Рейн), включая оба реактора. Это следует из указа, опубликованного 3 мая в правительственном бюллетене.

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Международное французское радио
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Власти Франции санкционировали полный демонтаж бывшей атомной электростанции в Фессенхайме (Верхний Рейн), включая оба реактора. Это следует из указа, опубликованного 3 мая в правительственном бюллетене.

In Brief: May 4, 2026
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12 minutes

Amarillo Tribune
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Students in those departments received more than $150,000 in scholarships. The post In Brief: May 4, 2026 appeared first on Amarillo Tribune.

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Amarillo Tribune
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Students in those departments received more than $150,000 in scholarships. The post In Brief: May 4, 2026 appeared first on Amarillo Tribune.

In 2019, Mia Tretta, then a high school freshman at Saugus High School in Santa Clarita, California, was struck in the stomach by a round from a .45-caliber semiautomatic handgun fired by a schoolmate. Two students were killed during the attack, including her best friend, and two others were injured. When she graduated from high […]

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The Trace
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In 2019, Mia Tretta, then a high school freshman at Saugus High School in Santa Clarita, California, was struck in the stomach by a round from a .45-caliber semiautomatic handgun fired by a schoolmate. Two students were killed during the attack, including her best friend, and two others were injured. When she graduated from high […]

Plus: ICE hired private contractor accused of ‘torture’ to track down undocumented children, and more immigration news The post Immigration News Today: Federal Judge Blocks Trump Admin. From Deporting 3,000 Yemeni Refugees appeared first on Documented.

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Documented
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Plus: ICE hired private contractor accused of ‘torture’ to track down undocumented children, and more immigration news The post Immigration News Today: Federal Judge Blocks Trump Admin. From Deporting 3,000 Yemeni Refugees appeared first on Documented.

12 minutes

ICT
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Social media pushed Standing Rock’s message from on-the-ground efforts and communication to international awareness, redefining Indigenous narratives The post How social media amplified the Standing Rock movement appeared first on ICT.

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ICT
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Social media pushed Standing Rock’s message from on-the-ground efforts and communication to international awareness, redefining Indigenous narratives The post How social media amplified the Standing Rock movement appeared first on ICT.

12 minutes

Mirror Indy
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The workshop will cover latching, milk supply and breastfeeding strategies. The post Get breastfeeding tips at a free workshop at CAFE appeared first on Mirror Indy.

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Mirror Indy
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The workshop will cover latching, milk supply and breastfeeding strategies. The post Get breastfeeding tips at a free workshop at CAFE appeared first on Mirror Indy.

President Trump’s fiscal 2027 federal budget outline, released on April 3, 2026, proposes to fund most of the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s (USDA) rural housing programs. But the budget also proposes severe cuts to U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) and other important programs that serve low- and moderate-income people in rural America.  […] The post Trump’s 2027 Budget Proposes Deep Cuts Across Federal Agencies, Restores Some Rural-Focused USDA Housing Funds appeared first on The Daily Yonder.

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Daily Yonder
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President Trump’s fiscal 2027 federal budget outline, released on April 3, 2026, proposes to fund most of the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s (USDA) rural housing programs. But the budget also proposes severe cuts to U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) and other important programs that serve low- and moderate-income people in rural America.  […] The post Trump’s 2027 Budget Proposes Deep Cuts Across Federal Agencies, Restores Some Rural-Focused USDA Housing Funds appeared first on The Daily Yonder.

Sign up for Chalkbeat Newark’s free newsletter to get the latest news about the city’s public school system delivered to your inbox.Mark Comesañas recalled a former student, Jose, who arrived at adulthood without a critical skill needed to navigate life: At 19, he couldn’t read a Dr. Seuss book. “The options he has at 19 are slim,” said Comesañas, the executive director of My Brother’s Keeper Newark, during a panel last Thursday at Teach For America New Jersey’s inaugural One Day Breakfast event, which convened Newark leaders to talk about low literacy rates and solutions. That story resonated with the policymakers and education leaders in the room, who are confronting a crisis impacting not only Newark but the nation. Too many students are not reading at grade level, and they are reaching adulthood without ever learning to read well. Test scores from the National Assessment of Educational Progress, or NAEP, from 2024 show that most students in the United States are still performing below pre-pandemic levels in reading and math, while the gap between high-achieving students and low-performing students keeps widening. Last spring, only 34% of Newark Public Schools’ students in grades 3-9 passed the state’s English Language Arts test, and although those numbers lag behind statewide averages, they are a slight improvement from levels seen right after the pandemic. Across New Jersey, 53% of students passed the statewide English Language Arts test in 2025.Teach for America New Jersey organized last week’s event to spread a call to action to ensure every child can read on grade level. The event addressed the history of reading in New Jersey and local challenges such as the barriers in Black and Latino communities that prevent students from boosting their literacy skills. The organization is also hosting a similar event in Camden in May. “We have to get local and we have to stop trying to scapegoat,” Tahina Perez, the executive director of Teach for America New Jersey, told Chalkbeat on a call last Wednesday. Perez said she saw the literacy issue coming years before the pandemic, as far back as 2018. At that time, Perez and her team were tracking the number of Black and Latino students, particularly those in low-income communities, who were falling behind in reading. Last week’s event was meant to continue local collaboration to find ways to address the problem in Newark.“When children are confident and independent readers, communities grow stronger, democracy works better, and opportunity expands,” Perez said at the event last week. “And when we get this wrong, the consequences last a lifetime.”Tahina Perez, executive director of Teach for America New Jersey, speaks with My Brother’s Keeper executive director Mark Comesañas, JerseyCAN executive director Paula White, and New Jersey Institute for Social Justice president and CEO Ryan Haygood about literacy challenges on Thursday, April 30, 2026.Newark’s literacy crisis did not happen overnight. Remote learning during the pandemic caused students to miss critical classroom time, and in the city, Newark Public Schools, along with state and local leaders, are working to help students get back on track. Research shows that reading skills play a key role in a child’s likelihood of graduating high school, pursuing college, and ultimately a career. Experts say a student’s literacy levels in third grade predict what their skills will be in the eighth grade and beyond. Newark’s low reading rates have also drawn attention in Trenton, where New Jersey’s Republican lawmakers have questioned why literacy rates are so low. Assemblyman Alex Sauickie has called for more transparency about how Newark Public Schools is using its money to help students refine their reading and recently questioned district leadership. “This isn’t a partisan issue, it’s a moral one,” said Sauickie in a statement. “Taxpayers deserve complete transparency on where this money is going and why it is producing such poor academic outcomes.“Yet in New Jersey, the systems meant to catch up students struggling to read are inconsistent, Paula White, executive director of JerseyCAN, a literacy advocacy group, told Chalkbeat. The state’s recently passed literacy framework mandates universal literacy screeners across all of New Jersey’s more than 500 school districts, but doesn’t require a specific screener or high-quality instructional materials. Similarly, literacy coaching is unevenly distributed, White said. “You’re going to have some school districts that are in fantastic shape,” White added. “And then you’ll have a third that are just, quite frankly, rudderless.”Perez also pointed to the larger systemic problems impacting Newark’s reading rates that she says aren’t just a “school problem, or a parent problem, or a student problem.” “If we believe that education is a fundamental right from the moment you step foot on the soil, then we need to be thinking about the systems and the structures at play that prevent this from being true,” Perez added. Jessie Gomez is a reporter for Chalkbeat Newark, covering public education in the city. Contact Jessie at jgomez@chalkbeat.org.

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Chalkbeat
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Sign up for Chalkbeat Newark’s free newsletter to get the latest news about the city’s public school system delivered to your inbox.Mark Comesañas recalled a former student, Jose, who arrived at adulthood without a critical skill needed to navigate life: At 19, he couldn’t read a Dr. Seuss book. “The options he has at 19 are slim,” said Comesañas, the executive director of My Brother’s Keeper Newark, during a panel last Thursday at Teach For America New Jersey’s inaugural One Day Breakfast event, which convened Newark leaders to talk about low literacy rates and solutions. That story resonated with the policymakers and education leaders in the room, who are confronting a crisis impacting not only Newark but the nation. Too many students are not reading at grade level, and they are reaching adulthood without ever learning to read well. Test scores from the National Assessment of Educational Progress, or NAEP, from 2024 show that most students in the United States are still performing below pre-pandemic levels in reading and math, while the gap between high-achieving students and low-performing students keeps widening. Last spring, only 34% of Newark Public Schools’ students in grades 3-9 passed the state’s English Language Arts test, and although those numbers lag behind statewide averages, they are a slight improvement from levels seen right after the pandemic. Across New Jersey, 53% of students passed the statewide English Language Arts test in 2025.Teach for America New Jersey organized last week’s event to spread a call to action to ensure every child can read on grade level. The event addressed the history of reading in New Jersey and local challenges such as the barriers in Black and Latino communities that prevent students from boosting their literacy skills. The organization is also hosting a similar event in Camden in May. “We have to get local and we have to stop trying to scapegoat,” Tahina Perez, the executive director of Teach for America New Jersey, told Chalkbeat on a call last Wednesday. Perez said she saw the literacy issue coming years before the pandemic, as far back as 2018. At that time, Perez and her team were tracking the number of Black and Latino students, particularly those in low-income communities, who were falling behind in reading. Last week’s event was meant to continue local collaboration to find ways to address the problem in Newark.“When children are confident and independent readers, communities grow stronger, democracy works better, and opportunity expands,” Perez said at the event last week. “And when we get this wrong, the consequences last a lifetime.”Tahina Perez, executive director of Teach for America New Jersey, speaks with My Brother’s Keeper executive director Mark Comesañas, JerseyCAN executive director Paula White, and New Jersey Institute for Social Justice president and CEO Ryan Haygood about literacy challenges on Thursday, April 30, 2026.Newark’s literacy crisis did not happen overnight. Remote learning during the pandemic caused students to miss critical classroom time, and in the city, Newark Public Schools, along with state and local leaders, are working to help students get back on track. Research shows that reading skills play a key role in a child’s likelihood of graduating high school, pursuing college, and ultimately a career. Experts say a student’s literacy levels in third grade predict what their skills will be in the eighth grade and beyond. Newark’s low reading rates have also drawn attention in Trenton, where New Jersey’s Republican lawmakers have questioned why literacy rates are so low. Assemblyman Alex Sauickie has called for more transparency about how Newark Public Schools is using its money to help students refine their reading and recently questioned district leadership. “This isn’t a partisan issue, it’s a moral one,” said Sauickie in a statement. “Taxpayers deserve complete transparency on where this money is going and why it is producing such poor academic outcomes.“Yet in New Jersey, the systems meant to catch up students struggling to read are inconsistent, Paula White, executive director of JerseyCAN, a literacy advocacy group, told Chalkbeat. The state’s recently passed literacy framework mandates universal literacy screeners across all of New Jersey’s more than 500 school districts, but doesn’t require a specific screener or high-quality instructional materials. Similarly, literacy coaching is unevenly distributed, White said. “You’re going to have some school districts that are in fantastic shape,” White added. “And then you’ll have a third that are just, quite frankly, rudderless.”Perez also pointed to the larger systemic problems impacting Newark’s reading rates that she says aren’t just a “school problem, or a parent problem, or a student problem.” “If we believe that education is a fundamental right from the moment you step foot on the soil, then we need to be thinking about the systems and the structures at play that prevent this from being true,” Perez added. Jessie Gomez is a reporter for Chalkbeat Newark, covering public education in the city. Contact Jessie at jgomez@chalkbeat.org.

Three years ago, Angelia Pressley started tuning in to Georgia Public Service Commission meetings and learned how much power the little-known regulatory body had over the lives of the state’s residents.  The commission, which is made up of five elected officials, could approve or deny electricity rate hikes, create energy efficiency standards and determine what […]

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The 19th News
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Three years ago, Angelia Pressley started tuning in to Georgia Public Service Commission meetings and learned how much power the little-known regulatory body had over the lives of the state’s residents.  The commission, which is made up of five elected officials, could approve or deny electricity rate hikes, create energy efficiency standards and determine what […]

Больше половины россиян (56%) хотели бы возвращения западных брендов, ушедших из страны после начала полномасштабной войны в 2022 году. Об этом пишут «Ведомости» со ссылкой на опрос, проведенный ассоциацией исследовательских компаний «Группа 7/89» в феврале-марте 2026 года.

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Медуза
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Больше половины россиян (56%) хотели бы возвращения западных брендов, ушедших из страны после начала полномасштабной войны в 2022 году. Об этом пишут «Ведомости» со ссылкой на опрос, проведенный ассоциацией исследовательских компаний «Группа 7/89» в феврале-марте 2026 года.