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Leader of Federal Student Aid Office Steps Down After FAFSA Crisis

During Richard Cordray’s tenure at the agency, the botched rollout of the new FAFSA upended the college admissions process.
Read full article on: nytimes.com
Our daughter wanted a mommy, so she picked one of her dads
Are women really the only people who can be maternal?
6 m
washingtonpost.com
A renewed Russian offensive on Ukraine’s Kharkiv forces about 1700 to evacuate
Russian forces have begun a renewed ground assault on Ukraine’s northeast, killing and injuring several and forcing more than 1,700 civilians to evacuate from the Kharkiv region, local officials said
abcnews.go.com
How student protesters organized massive protests nationwide
Hundreds of students have launched protests surrounding Israel’s incursion on Gaza with impressive coordination, begging the question: How do they do it?
abcnews.go.com
Four movie moms who feel real
Celebrate this Mother’s Day with onscreen matriarchs who seem just as dramatic and imperfect as we are.
washingtonpost.com
Shari Redstone was poised to make Paramount a Hollywood comeback story. What happened?
Rather than leading Paramount to reclaim its place among industry titans, Redstone's tenure atop the company has been marred by miscalculations and setbacks.
latimes.com
The prosecution's star witness against Trump, Michael Cohen, is a chronic and habitual liar
It is indisputable that Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg’s star witness, Michael Cohen, is an incurable and prodigious liar
foxnews.com
Auroras lit up mountain skies west of D.C. area, away from the clouds
If you were as close-by as western portions of Virginia and Maryland, beautiful northern lights appeared.
washingtonpost.com
Narrative of Trump snoozing in court takes hold — much to his annoyance
It’s unclear if Trump has actually been sleeping and he vehemently denies it. But Democrats and late-night hosts have seized on the reports anyway.
washingtonpost.com
Letters to the Editor: A Latino moderator, mic cutoffs, no audiences: Reader ideas for Biden-Trump debates
Reader suggestions for another round of Trump-Biden debates range from strict rules on microphone cutoffs to no rules at all.
latimes.com
L.A. County captures 96 billion gallons of water during 'super year' of storms
L.A. County has captured enough stormwater to supply an estimated 2.4 million people for a year. Officials say they plan to capture more runoff in the future.
latimes.com
High housing costs may be California’s biggest problem. The state’s politics haven’t caught up
Of the topics critical to California’s future, the cost of housing beats almost everything. Yet it has never emerged as a defining issue in the state’s politics.
latimes.com
John Wayne's lifelong leading role as American patriot celebrated at Fort Worth museum
John Wayne: An American Experience opened in December 2020 in Fort Worth, Texas. It celebrates the life, career and patriotism of legendary film star.
foxnews.com
The TV moments Trump lawyers used to question Stormy Daniels’s credibility
Comparing Stormy Daniels’s own words vs. how former president Donald Trump’s lawyers portrayed them in court.
washingtonpost.com
A Long Beach man started a petition to ban Airbnb in his neighborhood — and it worked
Long Beach resident Andy Oliver led a nearly yearlong push to ban unhosted short-term rentals in the College Estates neighborhood. It not only succeeded but fueled nine additional ban drives throughout the city.
latimes.com
Mother's Day without our matriarchs
For a family established by immigrants, there's an extra dimension of grief when those who were born in the old country are gone.
latimes.com
Jewish voices struggle to find words of reconciliation in face of campus violence
At universities such as UCLA, where students from diverse backgrounds live, study and debate together, the clashes have been particularly extreme. Progressive Jewish leaders are seeking a middle ground that respects the humanity on both sides of the conflict.
latimes.com
'My Octopus Teacher' director takes a cold plunge to reconnect with nature in 'Amphibious Soul'
In Craig Foster's new memoir, the filmmaker calls on us to reclaim our wildness, even as humans don't seem too inclined to try to reverse climate change.
latimes.com
Man's 'Cost Effective' Diet of 12 Eggs a Day Goes Viral-Experts Weigh In
Ray Hicks eats between six and 18 eggs daily and strongly advocates for it, though Newsweek has consulted doctors who caution against this practice.
newsweek.com
2025 Subaru Forester Review: Good (As Always), But Some Failings
Subaru's safety technology and upgraded seats help it earn high marks, but it faces stiff competition that's not letting off the accelerator.
newsweek.com
Inside the surreal world of $20,000 pet portraits
These fine-art painters command top dollar to immortalize their clients’ poodles and cockapoos.
washingtonpost.com
Burning Man, home of 'radical self expression,' removes pro-Palestinian sculpture from its website
Amid controversy, organizers of Burning Man removed an art installation titled "From the River to the Sea" from its website. The sculpture was scheduled to appear at this year's festival.
latimes.com
I’m a sleep expert — here’s how new moms can get more sleep
Sleep is essential and new moms need more of it. 
nypost.com
Israel’s other war
An Israeli reserve combat soldier takes part in a training drill on May 8, 2024, in the Golan Heights. | Amir Levy/Getty Images Israel and Hezbollah are trying to keep their fighting contained. But the conflict keeps escalating. If not for the ongoing carnage in Gaza, there’s a good chance the spiral of violence between Israel and the Lebanon-based military group Hezbollah would be the Middle Eastern conflict dominating the world’s attention right now. In the weeks leading up to the current Israeli offensive in Rafah, there was often more actual fighting happening on Israel’s northern border with Lebanon than in the south in Gaza. The fighting has been happening since the day after Hamas’s October 7 attacks, when Hezbollah launched guided rocket strikes against Israel in what it called “solidarity with the victorious Palestinian resistance.” Hezbollah has continually fired rockets and drones into Israel and in return, the Israeli military has launched air and military strikes against the group’s bases in Lebanon in response. Hamas and Hezbollah are both Iran-backed, anti-Israel militant groups, though they differ significantly in ideology and operational approach. In the first six months of the fighting, there were at least 4,400 combined strikes from both sides, according to the US-based Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS). An estimated 250 Hezbollah members and 75 Lebanese civilians have been killed in the fighting, along with 20 Israelis — both civilians and soldiers. More than 60,000 residents of northern Israel have been displaced by the attacks, along with some 90,000 people in southern Lebanon. Those numbers may pale against the far larger death toll and refugee crisis caused by the fighting in Gaza, but the situation in the north could have been — and may yet be — far worse than it has been, given the military strength on both sides. The Israeli military is, for its size, one of the most powerful in the world, while Hezbollah is the best-armed non-state group in the world, with an arsenal of between 120,000 and 200,000 rockets and missiles and up to 30,000 active personnel and 20,000 reserves, according to CSIS estimates. If it wanted to, Hezbollah could cause far more damage on Israel than Hamas — which for comparison, had around 30,000 rockets before October 7 — ever could. While both sides have seemed to be trying to avoid escalating the fighting into a full-scale war as devastating as the one they fought in 2006, that doesn’t mean such a war won’t happen anyway. After the latest series of Israeli Defense Forces (IDF) airstrikes in Lebanon, in response to Hezbollah drone attacks on May 6 that killed two IDF soldiers, Defense Minister Yoav Gallant predicted a “hot summer” on the border. Considering that both sides supposedly don’t want escalation, they don’t appear to be doing anything to de-escalate. Which raises the question: How long can this very violent conflict stay under control? And what will it take to stop it from spilling over into something worse? Hezbollah and its evolution, briefly explained On November 3, 2023, nearly a month after the war began, Hassan Nasrallah, the cleric who has led Hezbollah since the early 1990s, finally addressed the conflict publicly. Amid widespread speculation that the group was about to escalate its involvement in the conflict — a worrying possibility, given Hezbollah’s military strength — Nasrallah told supporters, “Some claim that we are about to engage in the war. I’m telling you we have been engaged in this battle since October the 8th.” In other words, the group would continue doing what it had already been doing up until that point: keeping the pressure on Israel and forcing it to divert resources — according to some media reports, the IDF has more troops on the Lebanese border than in Gaza — while minimizing its own exposure to risk. Part of the challenge of understanding Hezbollah and what it may do comes from the group’s unique structure. Hezbollah is a hybrid organization that simultaneously acts as a military group fighting Israel, a proxy group acting on Iran’s behalf, a political party within Lebanon, and the de facto governing authority in parts of the country. Its origins date back to the early 1980s, when Israeli troops invaded and occupied part of southern Lebanon in an attempt to drive the Palestine Liberation Organization, then based there, out of the country. With the backing of Iran’s Revolutionary Guards, a group of Lebanese Shiite Muslims took up arms against the Israeli occupation, eventually taking the name Hezbollah, which means “Party of God.” Hezbollah became known globally for a series of dramatic terrorist attacks, including the bombings of the US embassy and Marine Corps barracks in Beirut in 1983 (the latter of which killed 241 US military personnel), the bombing of a Jewish Community Center in Argentina in 1994, and the 2005 assassination of Lebanese Prime Minister Rafik Hariri. Israel eventually withdrew its troops from Lebanon in 2000, but that didn’t end the conflict. In 2006, Hezbollah abducted two Israeli soldiers, sparking a two-month war during which Israeli troops invaded southern Lebanon and Hezbollah fired thousands of rockets at Israel. Including both combatants and civilians, more than 1,100 Lebanese and more than 160 Israelis were killed in the war, which ended in a stalemate, though both sides claimed victory. Hezbollah was also heavily involved in the Syrian civil war, which began in 2011, fighting on behalf of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad’s Iran-backed regime. It still has a significant military presence in Syria, which has periodically been targeted by Israeli airstrikes in recent years. That experience in Syria, according to many experts, transformed the group’s identity and is necessary to understanding its approach to the current war. Today, it’s a regional power player as much as a resistance movement. “Hezbollah’s mission has completely changed since 2006,” said Hanin Ghaddar, senior fellow at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy and author of a recent book on the group. “In 2006, the mission was to fight Israel. However, their mission shifted when they went into Syria. Today their mission is to act as an insurance policy and a protective shield for Iran. Their job is actually to protect Iran’s interests, not to fight Israel.” In this respect, it differs from Hamas, which has also received weapons and funding from Iran but acts far more independently. (As it demonstrated in the October 7 attacks, which were likely undertaken without the explicit blessing of its Iranian sponsor.) Hamas is also a Sunni group, as opposed to Shiite Hezbollah, which put the two groups on opposite sides of the Syrian civil war, with Hamas backing the anti-Assad rebels. In recent years, however, they’ve patched things up, even reportedly maintaining a joint operations center in Lebanon during the last round of fighting in Gaza in 2021. But in contrast to Hamas, Hezbollah has been much more wary about direct confrontation with Israel. “They don’t see themselves with huge tank columns rolling into Galilee [in Northern Israel] toward Jerusalem,” Heiko Wimmen, a Lebanon-based analyst for the International Crisis Group, told Vox. “What they want is to build coalitions that constrain Israel’s actions and suffocate them, slowing building toward Israel collapsing from its own internal contradictions.” If nothing else, this approach has spared southern Lebanon the type of scenes now unfolding in Gaza. But recent events across the border have made that kind of slow approach harder to sustain. Why the fighting has escalated Israeli strikes since October 7 have killed some of Hezbollah’s most senior commanders — though Israel’s claims to have killed “half” of its commanders may be somewhat exaggerated. The early April strike on the Iranian consulate in Damascus killed Mohammad Reza Zahedi, the Iranian general who was believed to be the group’s principal liaison with Iran and sat on its governing council. Even as it has sought to avoid a repeat of 2006, Hezbollah has already lost roughly the same number of fighters that were killed during that conflict, to say nothing of the humanitarian crisis faced by the tens of thousands of Lebanese civilians in the south forced from their homes by the fighting. Hasan Fneich/AFP via Getty Images Residents of the southern Lebanese village of Aita al-Shaab walk past debris caused by Israeli strikes on April 9, 2024. Considering the impact on its own strength and the areas it governs, the war so far has in many ways been the worst of both worlds for Hezbollah. “What they’re doing is just bringing damage to Lebanon without actually affecting anything in Israel,” said Ghaddar. Hezbollah might therefore hope to climb down off the escalation ladder and keep its powder dry for the next confrontation with Israel. Hezbollah officials have said they will likely stop their strikes against Israel if Hamas agrees to a ceasefire, unless Israel continues its strikes into Lebanon. Until then, it’s likely locked into the current cycle — unable to unilaterally stop its strikes without losing credibility with both its supporters and its Iranian patrons, but desperate to avoid incurring even greater losses. “Hezbollah has climbed a pretty high tree by committing themselves to fighting as long as the war in Gaza has not ended,” said Wimmen. Israel’s calculations In the days after the October 7 attacks, Israeli leaders received intelligence — false, as it turned out — that Hezbollah fighters were planning to cross the border into Israel in a multi-pronged attack. President Joe Biden reportedly had to talk Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu out of an all-out preemptive attack against the group inside Lebanon. Still, some senior officials, notably Defense Minister Gallant, have continued to push for more aggressive action against Hezbollah, which — notwithstanding the shocking events of October 7 — poses a much more serious military threat to Israel than Hamas ever did. Pressure on the Israeli government is growing from the tens of thousands of residents of northern Israel who remain displaced from their homes because of continual rocket attacks, forcing them to live with family, with friends, or in hotels. Even if the fighting were to stop, many say the fear of an October 7-style attack coming over the border would keep them from returning home. “We have two schools of thought on the issue in the security establishment here,” Nimrod Novik, a former foreign policy adviser to Prime Minister Shimon Peres, now with the Israel Policy Forum, told Vox. “There’s one that from day one [after October 7] wanted to prioritize Lebanon given that the threat is far more serious than Hamas. Then there’s the other school that argues you’ve got to finish the job in Gaza, whatever that means.” Gallant has suggested that Israel could increase its strikes against Hezbollah during a Gaza ceasefire. He has said that Israeli strikes will continue, ceasefire or no, until Hezbollah pulls its forces back from the border. David Cohen/JINI via Xinhua People take cover near the site of a rocket attack from Lebanon, in Kiryat Shmona, northern Israel, May 5, 2024. That’s a scenario that the US desperately wants to avoid. A wider regional war could potentially draw in US forces, and Washington has made avoiding one a priority since October. This has included military steps to deter Hezbollah like dispatching Navy ships to the Eastern Mediterranean as well as diplomatic efforts to end the fighting between the two sides led by Special Envoy Amos Hochstein. But that hasn’t dispelled the threat: In late February, CNN reported that US officials were increasingly concerned that the IDF could launch a ground incursion into Lebanon. Novik told Vox he is worried that the “Israeli home front is not prepared for the kind of damage that Hezbollah can inflict” on Israel, given Hezbollah’s military capabilities, which are much more formidable than those of Hamas. The northern threat is likely also weighing on Israeli leaders’ minds in the wake of this week’s announcement from the White House that the US is pausing some weapons shipments to Israel due to concerns about its offensive in Rafah. Israeli officials have reacted to the announcement with defiance, with Netanyahu saying the country is prepared to “stand alone” if it has to. On Gaza, at least, Netanyahu could be right: Israel might have enough weapons in its own stocks and from other countries to continue the fight in the south. But if it has to wage a second war as well, its resources might become far more stretched. The best hope for peace is that both Israel and Hezbollah still have strong individual incentives to avoid a larger conflict. “Both sides know that an all-out war would be extremely destructive, quite possibly even more destructive than the previous war in 2006, and with very little plausible gain,” said Wimmen. But wars are not always started by rational calculation. Novik said it was still very possible that, despite both sides’ best efforts, “a missile that hits the wrong target and creates the number of casualties that the other side finds unacceptable could bring us into conflagration.” The longer the wars on both fronts drag on, the more likely that becomes.
vox.com
Luton Town vs. West Ham prediction: Premier League odds, picks Saturday
It is the penultimate Match Week of the 2023-24 Premier League season and we've still got plenty of drama to sort out. 
nypost.com
Reconstruction of Oct. 7 massacre is a punch to the gut, the senses and the tear ducts
“The Nova Music Festival Exhibition: October 7th 06:29am – The Moment Music Stood Still," in Manhattan, shows what really happened.
nypost.com
Letters to the Editor: Protesting the killing of 34,000 Palestinians isn't antisemitic
'Students want America to stand with the wretched and the poor — on the right side of history, not with criminals,' says a reader in defense of protesters.
latimes.com
Biden commencement address at Morehouse sparks debate over identity
Some students say Martin Luther King Jr., the school’s most famous alumnus, would be protesting the president’s speech instead of welcoming him
washingtonpost.com
Congress’ Perpetual Coup Machine Is Merely Resting
Mike Johnson should enjoy this while it lasts.
slate.com
Farewell, Chuck E. Cheese Animatronic Band
A mainstay of the pizza and arcade chain, by turns endearing and creepy, will be phased out by year’s end at all but two locations. We visited one of them.
nytimes.com
Donations to Colleges Have Been Political for Much Longer Than the Recent Billionaire Rebellion
Regular people have been making this kind of decision for years already.
slate.com
Florida woman sentenced to 5 years in prison for abusing Husky with rubber mallet: 'Dog lived in fear'
A Florida woman was sentenced to more than five years in prison on Friday after she was captured on camera beating a Husky with a rubber mallet in a Tampa home.
1 h
foxnews.com
California postal worker, 63, robbed at gunpoint in brazen daytime attack caught on video: ‘I’m going to die’
After the robbers ran away on foot with her cellphone and keys to several mailboxes and to her truck, the woman went to a neighbor's home and called 911.
1 h
nypost.com
Judge Merchan Hands Donald Trump Major Legal Setback
Donald Trump's lawyers were seeking documents about Stormy Daniels and other witnesses in Trump's hush money trial.
1 h
newsweek.com
Home prices are soaring. Is this another bubble?
Nearly 15 years after a housing bubble triggered the worst financial disaster since the Great Depression, some observers are saying a housing bubble may happen again.
1 h
abcnews.go.com
NY concertgoer Bird Piché partially paralyzed after Trophy Eyes singer’s stage dive into crowd
A punk rock-loving concertgoer is partially paralyzed and can only move her arms after a singer launched himself into the crowd during a show in New York last month.
1 h
nypost.com
A Rising Democrat Leans Into the Campus Fight Over Antisemitism
Gov. Josh Shapiro of Pennsylvania, the proudly Jewish leader of a battleground state, has dived headfirst into subjects that have wrenched apart his party.
2 h
nytimes.com
Will You Accept the Election Results? Republicans Dodge the Question.
Leading Republicans have refused to say flatly that they will accept the outcome of the presidential election if Donald Trump loses.
2 h
nytimes.com
Will an Authoritarian Government in Venezuela Allow a Fair Election?
President Nicolás Maduro has held on to power by holding sham elections. In July he will run again, but would he willingly cede power?
2 h
nytimes.com
Why Antiwar Protests Haven’t Flared Up at Black Colleges Like Morehouse
The White House appears anxious about President Biden’s coming speech at Morehouse College. But for complex reasons, such campuses have had far less visible Gaza tensions.
2 h
nytimes.com
Trump Has Long Been Known as a Micromanager. Prosecutors Are Using It Against Him.
Witnesses have described the former president monitoring the minutiae of his business, a portrait prosecutors are drawing to help convince the jury that he couldn’t have helped but oversee a hush-money payment to avoid a damaging story.
2 h
nytimes.com
Isolated and Defiant, Israel Vows to ‘Stand Alone’ in War on Hamas
As the death toll in Gaza has risen, countries have turned their backs on Israel. The consequences of those desertions, from security to economics, risk turning Israel into a pariah.
2 h
nytimes.com
Can You Make Your Investment Portfolio Reflect Your Values?
Forget about endowments and their holdings and divestment for a minute. What do you stand for, and how can you make your portfolio reflect that?
2 h
nytimes.com
Power Warning Issued As First 'Extreme' Geomagnetic Storm Hits in 20 Years
The NOAA Space Weather Prediction Center warned that a severe geomagnetic storm could disrupt mobile phone networks, GPS satellites and power grids in the U.S.
2 h
newsweek.com
Burkina Faso Accused of Massacring Civilians
Witnesses and human rights groups claim the West African country’s military killed more than 220 people, including women and children, in February. It was neither a mistake nor a one-off, they say.
2 h
nytimes.com
A Brief History of the 2,000-Pound Bombs Central to U.S.-Israeli Tensions
The one-ton Mark 84 bomb was designed shortly after World War II. Adding guidance kits has kept it in use for more than 70 years.
2 h
nytimes.com
Pokémon Go players are adding fake beaches to map program to make rare catches
Pokémon Go players are creating fake beaches in an open source mapping program so they can catch a rare pokémon — but changing a program used by millions around the world.
2 h
washingtonpost.com
The ‘Betches’ Got Rich. So What’s Next?
The women’s media company, which started as a raunchy college blog, is a rare financial success story — and on the White House’s radar. Now, it’s wrestling with how to grow up alongside its readers.
2 h
nytimes.com
Freshmen Democrats Work to Turn Biden Impeachment Effort on Its Head
A crop of novice lawmakers on the House Oversight Committee has countered Republicans’ allegations against President Biden with attention-grabbing charges of their own.
2 h
nytimes.com