Skip to Content

Month: April 2025

4 turistas espaciales aterrizaron con éxito tras viajar en una órbita única alrededor de la Tierra. Esto fue lo que vivieron

Por Jackie Wattles, CNN en Español SpaceX está finalizando el último capítulo en sus esfuerzos de vuelos espaciales comerciales con humanos con el regreso de Fram2. La misión llevó a cuatro pasajeros en una órbita única alrededor de la Tierra que permitió a los humanos pasar directamente sobre los polos Norte y Sur por primera

Continue Reading

Georgia bill that would let people sue over local gun control dies before Senate approval

By CHARLOTTE KRAMON Associated Press/Report for America ATLANTA (AP) — A Georgia bill that would have allowed residents to sue local governments for enacting local gun safety measures died Friday evening before the state Senate could approve it. The bill, which supporters said would have ensured localities don’t violate people’s gun rights, was passed by

Continue Reading
Dr. Peter Marks said he doesn't fully understand his ouster from the FDA

Dramatic HHS cuts leave US ‘weaker as a nation,’ says top FDA vaccine official forced out under Kennedy

By Katherine Dillinger, CNN (CNN) — Sweeping job cuts and reorganizations taking place at the US Department of Health and Human Services under Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. leave the United States “weaker as a nation,” Dr. Peter Marks told CNN on Friday. Marks, the former director of the US Food and Drug Administration’s Center

Continue Reading

Ex-assistant says filmmaker Paul Schrader sexually assaulted her and backed out of settlement deal

By MICHAEL R. SISAK Associated Press NEW YORK (AP) — Paul Schrader, the writer of “Taxi Driver” and director of “American Gigolo,” has been accused in a lawsuit of sexually assaulting his former personal assistant, firing her when she wouldn’t acquiesce to advances and reneging on a settlement that was meant to keep the allegations

Continue Reading

Georgia bill would compensate the wrongfully convicted and let Trump recover costs of election case

By CHARLOTTE KRAMON Associated Press/Report for America ATLANTA (AP) — A revived attempt to fix Georgia’s inefficient system for compensating people wrongfully convicted of crimes almost died. Then it got tacked onto a bill that could compensate former President Donald Trump and more than a dozen codefendants for attorneys’ fees after they were indicted for

Continue Reading

Georgia bill would compensate the wrongfully convicted and let Trump recover costs of election case

By CHARLOTTE KRAMON Associated Press/Report for America ATLANTA (AP) — A revived attempt to fix Georgia’s inefficient system for compensating people wrongfully convicted of crimes almost died. Then it got tacked onto a bill that could compensate former President Donald Trump and more than a dozen codefendants for attorneys’ fees after they were indicted for

Continue Reading

From local high school courts to MIAA: Luke Scheidecker returns to St. Joseph

Fast forward to just a week later, and the room was filled once again, this time to introduce the university’s 11th head women’s basketball coach, Luke Scheidecker.

For Scheidecker, the moment felt full circle. A native of Smithville, Missouri, he had the opportunity to return to his roots. Director of Athletics Andy Carter was intrigued by his success, even before he needed to make a call to fill a coaching vacancy. Once there was an opening, Carter picked up the phone instantly, making Scheidecker his first call.

Continue Reading

¿Puede EE.UU. revocar la visa de estudiante por asistir a protestas o por tus publicaciones en redes sociales?

Por Rocío Muñoz-Ledo, CNN en Español La orden de revisar las redes sociales de algunos estudiantes extranjeros ha desatado un amplio debate sobre qué tan protegidos están los solicitantes y titulares de visa de estudiante, en medio de una represión más amplia del Gobierno de Donald Trump contra los inmigrantes que participan en protestas universitarias

Continue Reading

Maya Angelou memoir, Holocaust book are among those pulled from Naval Academy library in DEI purge

By LOLITA C. BALDOR and TARA COPP Associated Press WASHINGTON (AP) — Books on the Holocaust, histories of feminism, civil rights and racism, and Maya Angelou’s famous autobiography, “I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings,” were among the nearly 400 volumes removed from the U.S. Naval Academy’s library this week after Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth’s

Continue Reading