• While Adán Correa looks for a partner on ‘Love on the Spectrum,’ he creates a platform to advocate for the autism community at home

    While Adán Correa looks for a partner on ‘Love on the Spectrum,’ he creates a platform to advocate for the autism community at home
    Adán Correa is just trying to get Honda Center visitors through his security line safely and efficiently. But there’s a bit of a holdup when people recognize the celebrity in their midst and ask for selfies.
    Correa, 29, is a breakout star from Netflix’s “Love on the Spectrum,” a reality program that follows young people on the autism spectrum as they navigate the dating world.
    Fans of the Emmy Award-winning show have followed along with Correa from the first season
  • ‘Love on the Spectrum’ star Adán Correa is using his fame to advocate for the autism community at home

    ‘Love on the Spectrum’ star Adán Correa is using his fame to advocate for the autism community at home
    Adán Correa is just trying to get Honda Center visitors through his security line safely and efficiently. But there’s a bit of a holdup when people recognize the celebrity in their midst and ask for selfies.
    Correa, 29, is a breakout star from Netflix’s “Love on the Spectrum,” a reality program that follows young people on the autism spectrum as they navigate the dating world.
    Fans of the Emmy Award-winning show have followed along with Correa from the first season
  • Struggling Clippers are trying to tune out the noise

    Struggling Clippers are trying to tune out the noise
    Between the Chris Paul-threw-a-party-and-no-one-came narrative and the NBA trade rumors, the Clippers are still playing basketball. And not doing it well.
    The team is on a four-game losing streak and has lost nine of its past 10 games after an embarrassing loss to the Memphis Grizzlies on Monday night. The Clippers continue to struggle defensively, can’t sustain leads, they turn the ball over at an alarming rate (15.4 per game) and face a real possibility of not winning again in 2025.
    The
  • Trump writes partisan plaques for predecessors in his newly installed Presidential Walk of Fame

    Trump writes partisan plaques for predecessors in his newly installed Presidential Walk of Fame
    By MATT BROWN and BILL BARROW
    WASHINGTON (AP) — Months after President Donald Trump refashioned a West Wing walkway into what he calls the Presidential Walk of Fame, he has added partisan and subjective plaques to the display, deepening his fingerprints on the White House’s aesthetic and continuing his effort to bend the telling of history to his liking.
    From “Sleepy Joe” Biden references to painting Republican icon Ronald Reagan as a fan of a young Trump, the plaques inc
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  • Trump’s push to make oil drilling cheap again squeezes some states more than others

    Trump’s push to make oil drilling cheap again squeezes some states more than others
    By MORGAN LEE
    SANTA FE, N.M. (AP) — A Republican push to make drilling cheaper on federal land is creating new fiscal pressure for states that depend on oil and gas revenue, most notably in New Mexico as it expands early childhood education and saves for the future.
    The shift stems from the sweeping law President Donald Trump signed in July that rolls back the minimum federal royalty rate to 12.5%. That rate — the share of production value companies must pay to the government —
  • FBI Deputy Director Dan Bongino says he plans to resign next month as bureau’s No. 2 official

    FBI Deputy Director Dan Bongino says he plans to resign next month as bureau’s No. 2 official
    By ERIC TUCKER
    WASHINGTON (AP) — FBI Deputy Director Dan Bongino said Wednesday that he will resign from the bureau next month, ending a brief and tumultuous tenure in which he clashed with the Justice Department over the handling of the Jeffrey Epstein files and was forced to reconcile the realities of his law enforcement job with provocative claims he made in his prior role as a popular podcast host.
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  • Minneapolis police chief criticizes ICE tactics after clash with protesters

    Minneapolis police chief criticizes ICE tactics after clash with protesters
    By SARAH RAZA, Associated Press
    Minneapolis’ police chief is criticizing federal immigration agents after a confrontation with protesters and an attempted arrest of a woman in which an officer kneeled on her back as she lay atop a snow bank and then tried to drag her to a car.
    Tensions have been rising in the Minneapolis-St. Paul area as federal authorities continue an immigration crackdown focused on the region’s Somali community, the largest in the country.
    Onlooker video of the co
  • Judge temporarily blocks Trump administration policies limiting lawmakers’ access to ICE facilities

    Judge temporarily blocks Trump administration policies limiting lawmakers’ access to ICE facilities
    WASHINGTON (AP) — A federal judge in the nation’s capital has temporarily blocked the Trump administration from enforcing policies limiting Congress members’ access to immigration detention facilities.
    The judge ruled on Wednesday that it is likely illegal for U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement to demand a week’s notice from members of Congress seeking to visit and observe conditions in ICE facilities.
    U.S. District Judge Jia Cobb, who was nominated to the
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  • Anaheim’s new police chief starts Dec. 29

    Anaheim’s new police chief starts Dec. 29
    A new Anaheim chief of police has been selected to serve Orange County’s most populated city.
    Manuel Cid, who currently heads Glendale’s police force of 450 people, will soon assume the Anaheim Police Department’s highest rank.
    Cid will become the city’s 38th chief of police effective Dec. 29, when he fills the vacancy left by Chief Rick Armendariz, who announced in July his plans to retire. He was appointed in 2023.
    The City Council unanimously approved Cid’s emplo
  • Imprisoned Jeffrey Epstein associate Ghislaine Maxwell seeks release, citing ‘new evidence’

    Imprisoned Jeffrey Epstein associate Ghislaine Maxwell seeks release, citing ‘new evidence’
    By MICHAEL R. SISAK and LARRY NEUMEISTER, Associated Press
    NEW YORK (AP) — Jeffrey Epstein’s former girlfriend and longtime associate Ghislaine Maxwell asked a federal judge on Wednesday to set aside her sex trafficking conviction and free her from a 20-year prison sentence, saying “substantial new evidence” has emerged proving that constitutional violations spoiled her trial.
    Maxwell maintained in a habeas petition she has promised to file since August that information t
  • Brea council approves revenue-sharing agreement with local developer to court a Costco

    Brea council approves revenue-sharing agreement with local developer to court a Costco
    The City Council decided Brea will enter an agreement with a Southern California real estate developer to pursue a Costco Wholesale in exchange for a portion of the resulting sales tax revenue if the big box store is landed.
    Under the agreement the council approved this week, 3-1, with Councilmember Christine Marick opposed and Councilmember Blair Stewart absent, Dwight Manley promises to purchase the 34-acre property at 200 and 250 S. Kraemer St. — currently the headquarters for Beckman C
  • All-County boys water polo: Kai Kaneko is the OC player of the year

    All-County boys water polo: Kai Kaneko is the OC player of the year
    Support our high school sports coverage by becoming a digital subscriber. Subscribe nowALL-COUNTY BOYS WATER POLO TEAM 2025
    PLAYER OF THE YEAR
    Kai Kaneko, Newport Harbor, Senior
    Kai Kaneko dove into his senior season with a special experience that he hoped would benefit Newport Harbor’s boys water polo program.
    Just a few months after his 17th birthday, he made his debut with the U.S. national men’s team during a series of local matches against Australia in June. The Stanford co
  • Senate confirms Jared Isaacman as NASA administrator in do-over after Musk feud

    Senate confirms Jared Isaacman as NASA administrator in do-over after Musk feud
    By MATT BROWN, Associated Press
    WASHINGTON (AP) — The Senate on Wednesday confirmed billionaire entrepreneur Jared Isaacman to be NASA administrator on Wednesday, placing him atop the agency after a monthslong saga where President Donald Trump revoked his nomination as part of a feud with tech billionaire Elon Musk.
    Isaacman, who has promised to bring a business-minded approach to the space agency, was confirmed in a bipartisan vote, 67-30.
    He will take over after an unusual confirmation p
  • New California law lets immigrant parents name a caretaker for their child if they’re separated

    New California law lets immigrant parents name a caretaker for their child if they’re separated
    A new law allowing parents to designate someone to care for their child in the event they are detained or deported by federal immigration authorities will soon take effect in California.
    Starting Jan. 1, the Family Preparedness Plan Act expands the type of relative who can qualify as a “caretaker” and creates a process by which a parent may nominate a caretaker to be a “temporary joint guardian” through probate court.
    The new law also prohibits licensed child daycare faci
  • Some sanctioned oil vessels divert from Venezuela as Trump threatens blockade

    Some sanctioned oil vessels divert from Venezuela as Trump threatens blockade
    By JOSHUA GOODMAN, Associated Press
    MIAMI (AP) — Some oil vessels are diverting away from Venezuela after U.S. President Donald Trump threatened a “blockade” of sanctioned oil tankers entering or leaving the South American country, a dramatic escalation in the White House’s pressure campaign on leader Nicolás Maduro.
    Trump said Tuesday on social media, in all caps, that he is ordering a “total and complete blockade of all sanctioned oil tankers” into an
  • Postal service plans to open last-mile delivery network to more shippers in money-raising move

    Postal service plans to open last-mile delivery network to more shippers in money-raising move
    By SUSAN HAIGH, Associated Press
    The U.S. Postal Service said Wednesday it intends to open its “last-mile” delivery network, the most expensive part of the shipping process, to large and small shippers, expanding beyond current arrangements with giants such as Amazon and UPS.
    The goal is to diversify and boost revenue through the postal carriers’ final leg of delivery to millions of individual homes and businesses.
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  • Ex-NFL player Hardy Nickerson named football coach at JSerra

    Ex-NFL player Hardy Nickerson named football coach at JSerra
    Former NFL linebacker Hardy Nickerson is the new football coach at JSerra, the school announced Wednesday.
    Nickerson, 60, was the head coach at Bishop O’Dowd High in Oakland the past four seasons. Bishop O’Dowd won the CIF State Division 5-AA championship Friday with a 37-0 win over El Cajon Christian at Fullerton High.
    Bishop O’Dowd head coach Hardy Nickerson on the sideline in a high school football game against Monte Vista at Monte Vista High School in Danville, California o
  • House to vote on resolutions to put limits on Trump’s campaign against Venezuela and drug cartels

    House to vote on resolutions to put limits on Trump’s campaign against Venezuela and drug cartels
    By STEPHEN GROVES and BEN FINLEY, Associated Press
    WASHINGTON (AP) — The House was voting Wednesday on a pair of resolutions that would put a check on President Donald Trump’s power to use military force against drug cartels and the nation of Venezuela.
    Democrats forced the votes using war powers resolutions as Trump has stepped up his threats against the South American nation and Congress has questioned how the U.S. military is conducting a campaign that has destroyed 25 vessels all
  • Energy Department watchdog will audit Trump’s cuts of nearly $8B in clean energy grants

    Energy Department watchdog will audit Trump’s cuts of nearly $8B in clean energy grants
    By ALEXA ST. JOHN, Associated Press
    An internal watchdog in the U.S. Department of Energy will investigate the Trump administration’s termination of $7.6 billion in grants for hundreds of clean energy projects across 16 states that voted for former Vice President Kamala Harris in the 2024 presidential election.
    The move is especially welcome for Democrats who said that the cuts — part of broader attacks from President Donald Trump on climate programs and clean energy funding —
  • Trump administration moves to dissolve national climate research lab in Colorado

    Trump administration moves to dissolve national climate research lab in Colorado
    By MATTHEW DALY and SUSAN MONTOYA BRYAN, Associated Press
    WASHINGTON (AP) — The Trump administration is dismantling the National Center for Atmospheric Research in Colorado, moving to dissolve a research lab that a top White House official described as “one of the largest sources of climate alarmism in the country.″
    White House budget director Russ Vought criticized the lab in a social media post Tuesday night and said a comprehensive review of the lab is underway. “Vital
  • Council public hearing on Anaheim Hills Festival Center housing project pushed to January

    Council public hearing on Anaheim Hills Festival Center housing project pushed to January
    The Anaheim City Council now plans to consider the housing development proposed to replace the cinema at the Anaheim Hills Festival Center next month.
    The council will also be considering at the Jan. 13 meeting a general plan amendment, amending the site plan for the shopping center area, a final site plan and a development agreement.
    Developers propose to turn the shopping center’s shuttered Regal Cinema into a four-story residential building.
    That project would bring 447 apartment units,
  • ‘Living shoreline’ solution being tried to protect eroding Talbert Marsh

    ‘Living shoreline’ solution being tried to protect eroding Talbert Marsh
    Just inland of the ocean and the cars zooming past on the busy Pacific Coast Highway, a wetland oasis is threatened.
    Erosion is chipping away at sensitive and critical habitat inside the Talbert Marsh, at an island area where endangered birds nest each year. Nearby, the loss of sediment is also worrisome for an electric pole that powers a street light at Brookhurst Street and PCH, where damage could cause a nightmare for drivers who use the busy roadways.
    But work is underway to slow the erosion
  • Trump pays respects to 2 Iowa National Guardsmen and interpreter killed in Syria as they return home

    Trump pays respects to 2 Iowa National Guardsmen and interpreter killed in Syria as they return home
    By MICHELLE L. PRICE, Associated Press
    DOVER AIR FORCE BASE, Del. (AP) — President Donald Trump on Wednesday paid his respects to two Iowa National Guard members and a U.S. civilian interpreter who were killed in an attack in the Syrian desert, joining their grieving families as their remains were brought back to the country they served.
    Trump met privately with the families at Dover Air Force Base in Delaware before the dignified transfer, a solemn ritual conducted in honor of U.S. servic
  • Senate approves bill inspired by DC plane crash to ensure military aircraft will broadcast location

    Senate approves bill inspired by DC plane crash to ensure military aircraft will broadcast location
    By JOSH FUNK, Associated Press
    The Senate moved quickly Wednesday afternoon to close a loophole that could allow military aircraft to fly without broadcasting their locations just like an Army helicopter was doing last January before it collided with an airliner over Washington, D.C., killing 67 people.
    Just hours after passing a massive defense bill that included the worrisome provisions about military flights, the Senate approved a bipartisan bill that will require all aircraft use ADS-B techn
  • Are policymakers ready for the potential impact of AI on the labor market?

    Are policymakers ready for the potential impact of AI on the labor market?
    At some point in the future, AI and robotics will be advanced enough to perform nearly all of the jobs currently performed by humans. Such a future will require that we radically change the relationship that we have with the economy and the means of production. Corporations will be forced to share their revenues as a universal basic income if they want to exist at all. 
    However, before we achieve complete automation, there will be a period of gradually increasing AI adoption that will prese
  • Motorcycle officers from Garden Grove, Long Beach injured in separate 22 Freeway crashes

    Motorcycle officers from Garden Grove, Long Beach injured in separate 22 Freeway crashes
    Two motorcycle police officers — one with Garden Grove’s department, the other with Long Beach’s — were injured in separate crashes on the eastbound 22 Freeway in Garden Grove within an hour of each other and about two miles apart on Tuesday afternoon, Dec. 16, authorities said.
    Both officers were hospitalized for moderate injuries, said Officer Duane Graham, a California Highway Patrol spokesman.
    About 4 p.m., the CHP began receiving calls about a crash in the left lane
  • Winter Olympics 2026: How to watch and key things to know about the Milan Cortina Games

    Winter Olympics 2026: How to watch and key things to know about the Milan Cortina Games
    The countdown is on for the 2026 Winter Olympics in Italy.
    The torch relay is already underway and some of the top athletes are already making headlines. There are 16 sports in all, including some never seen before, and 116 gold medals are waiting to be awarded.
    This will be the most spread-out Winter Games in history: The two primary competition sites are the city of Milan and Cortina d’Ampezzo, the upscale winter resort in the Dolomites that is more than 250 miles away by road. Athletes
  • Winter Olympics 2026 guide: All you need to know about the Milan–Cortina Games

    Winter Olympics 2026 guide: All you need to know about the Milan–Cortina Games
    The countdown is on for the 2026 Winter Olympics in Italy.
    The torch relay is already underway and some of the top athletes are already making headlines. There are 16 sports in all, including some never seen before, and 116 gold medals are waiting to be awarded.
    A couple takes a photo in front of the Milan Cortina Winter Olympics countdown clock, in Cortina D’Ampezzo, Friday, Nov. 21, 2025. (AP Photo/Andrew Medichini)
    This will be the most spread-out Winter Games in history: The two primar
  • Newsom relaxed his pro-housing stance for certain Democratic locales

    Newsom relaxed his pro-housing stance for certain Democratic locales
    When Gavin Newsom was running for governor he made many promises, one of which was to ramp up housing production, which had been in the doldrums for a decade.
    Describing housing as “a fundamental human need,” Newsom said the shortage “breaks my heart” and promised that as governor he would lead the effort to develop “the 3.5 million new housing units we need by 2025, because our solutions must be as bold as the problem is big.”
    The goal was impossible on its f
  • Poorer Americans dropped federal flood insurance when rates rose

    Poorer Americans dropped federal flood insurance when rates rose
    By Leslie Kaufman | Bloomberg
    When the US Federal Emergency Management Agency overhauled rates for millions of homeowners in the National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP), in 2021, the goal was to end decades of underpricing and to align premiums with real flood risk, driven higher by climate change. Critics warned, however, that higher, more honest prices could push homeowners — particularly poorer ones — out of the program and potentially leave them without an emergenc
  • Angels GM Perry Minasian has ideas to help Jordan Romano

    Angels GM Perry Minasian has ideas to help Jordan Romano
    Perry Minasian believes the Angels can help Jordan Romano rediscover himself.
    A day after the Angels signed the former All-Star reliever to a $2 million deal, the general manager explained why he thinks there is hope for him to put last season’s 8.23 ERA behind him.
    “There are some things we feel like we can do delivery-wise,” Minasian said Wednesday. “There are some things we feel like we can do with the slider. The biggest thing is the stuff is still good. He missed bat
  • After nearly 25 years, Gemmell’s in Dana Point announces closure

    After nearly 25 years, Gemmell’s in Dana Point announces closure
    Opening in 2001 at the Dana Point Harbor, chef-owner Byron Gemmell’s namesake restaurant, Gemmell’s, announced plans to close for good at year’s end.
    “Saying goodbye is never easy,” said Gemmell in a written release. “We appreciate the heartfelt support of our beloved patrons who’ve kept us going.”
    Hungry? Sign up for The Eat Index, our weekly food newsletter, and find out where to eat and get the latest restaurant happenings in Orange County. Subs
  • Medicaid health plans step up outreach efforts ahead of GOP changes

    Medicaid health plans step up outreach efforts ahead of GOP changes
    By Claudia Boyd-Barrett | KFF Health News
    Carmen Basu, bundled in a red jacket and woolly scarf, stood outside the headquarters of her local health plan in Orange one morning after picking up free groceries. She brought her husband, teenage son, and 79-year-old mother-in-law to help.
    They grabbed canned food, fruit and vegetables and a grocery store gift card. Basu spotted a row of tables in the parking lot staffed by county social service workers helping people apply for food assistance and hea
  • EU leaders prepare to take unprecedented steps to help Ukraine at a high-stakes summit

    EU leaders prepare to take unprecedented steps to help Ukraine at a high-stakes summit
    By LORNE COOK
    BRUSSELS (AP) — European Union leaders are about to attempt something they’ve never tried before. The chances of failure are significant. Their actions this week could set dangerous precedents and a wrong move could undermine trust among the bloc’s 27 member countries for years to come.
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  • New Year’s Eve: 5 dinners in Orange County that are worth the splurge

    New Year’s Eve: 5 dinners in Orange County that are worth the splurge
    While New Year’s Eve brings an onslaught of beer-soaked parties and midnight-hour tomfoolery, there is a distinct pleasure in choosing a more refined and relaxing route. Ringing in 2026 with a standout meal, one that offers great service, choice ingredients and a special atmosphere, is the perfect way to make a grand entrance into Jan. 1. If you’re looking for a more top-drawer affair, these five eateries are offering menus and settings perfect for your final celebration of the year.
  • What to know about MIT professor Nuno Loureiro, who was shot at home near Boston

    What to know about MIT professor Nuno Loureiro, who was shot at home near Boston
    Authorities are searching for a suspect in the killing of Nuno F.G. Loureiro, a prominent physics professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, who was shot at his home near Boston. The 47-year-old professor from Portugal was shot Monday night and died Tuesday at a local hospital.
    Authorities have not provided any details about a possible motive in the killing or any other details. No suspects were in custody as of Wednesday morning, the Norfolk District Attorney’s Office said.
    T
  • What to know about MIT professor Nuno Loureiro and the investigation into his shooting

    What to know about MIT professor Nuno Loureiro and the investigation into his shooting
    By The Associated Press
    Authorities are searching for a suspect in the killing of Nuno F.G. Loureiro, a prominent physics professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology who was shot at his home near Boston. Loureiro, a married 47-year-old from Portugal, was shot Monday night and died Tuesday at a local hospital.
    Authorities have not disclosed a possible motive, and no suspects were in custody as of Wednesday morning, the Norfolk District Attorney’s Office said.
    The shooti
  • Frumpy Mom: It’s almost Christmas and I’m not ready

    Frumpy Mom: It’s almost Christmas and I’m not ready
    Well, here we are, mere nanoseconds away from Christmas and I’m completely ready to go.
    My tree is glowing, the presents are all wrapped, the table is set with beautiful decorations and the lights are illuminating the front of the house in the most festive way possible, even outdoing Clark Griswold.
    For the first time in recent years, I got around to sending Christmas cards that I made by hand while otherwise wasting time watching Hallmark movies on TV.
    And, if you believe all that, I have
  • The Oscars will move to YouTube in 2029, leaving longtime home of ABC

    The Oscars will move to YouTube in 2029, leaving longtime home of ABC
    By JAKE COYLE, AP Film Writer
    In a seismic shift for one of television’s marquee events, the Academy Awards will depart ABC and begin streaming on YouTube beginning in 2029, the Academy of Motion Pictures Arts and Sciences announced Wednesday.
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  • Jeff Bezos and Lauren Sánchez Bezos are awarding $5 million to a leader in neurodiversity education

    Jeff Bezos and Lauren Sánchez Bezos are awarding $5 million to a leader in neurodiversity education
    By JAMES POLLARD
    NEW YORK (AP) — Mega billionaire Amazon founder Jeff Bezos and his wife, former news anchor Lauren Sánchez Bezos, are awarding $5 million to the founder of a neurodivergent student support network, a recognition that the lesser-known recipient credits to the students powering his fast-growing movement for more inclusive classrooms.
    “I feel like there’s a narrative sometimes that our little actions don’t matter,” Neurodiversity Alliance CEO Da
  • Nebraska plans to be the first state to implement Trump’s new Medicaid work requirements

    Nebraska plans to be the first state to implement Trump’s new Medicaid work requirements
    By GEOFF MULVIHILL
    Nebraska will become the first state to implement new work requirements for some people with Medicaid health insurance under a law President Donald Trump signed last year.
    Gov. Jim Pillen, a Republican, announced Wednesday that the requirement would take effect in the state May 1 and could impact about 30,000 people who have slightly higher incomes than traditional Medicaid beneficiaries.
    “We’re not here to take everybody to the curb,” he said. Instead, he sa
  • Saturn’s moon Titan may not have a buried ocean as long suspected, new study suggests

    Saturn’s moon Titan may not have a buried ocean as long suspected, new study suggests
    By MARCIA DUNN
    CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) — Saturn’s giant moon Titan may not have a vast underground ocean after all.Titan instead may hold deep layers of ice and slush more akin to Earth’s polar seas, with pockets of melted water where life could possibly survive and even thrive, scientists reported Wednesday.
    The team led by researchers at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory challenged the decade-long assumption of a buried global ocean at Titan after taking a fresh look a
  • Good news: Behind the scenes of some of the world’s most uplifting stories of 2025

    Good news: Behind the scenes of some of the world’s most uplifting stories of 2025
    By MICHAEL MELIA, Associated Press
    It was one of the year’s biggest stories — the selection of the first American pope — and an Associated Press journalist was interviewing the pope’s brother at his home in suburban Chicago. Suddenly, they heard a ringing coming from the basement. “That might be the pope,” the new pontiff’s brother said.
    Indeed, the man who had emerged hours earlier on the balcony of St. Peter’s Basilica as Pope Leo XIV was calling
  • Strikes and a $100 million heist push the Louvre into historic crisis

    Strikes and a $100 million heist push the Louvre into historic crisis
    By THOMAS ADAMSON
    PARIS (AP) — The ongoing strike at the Louvre is no longer just a labor dispute. It has become a test of how securely, credibly and competently the world’s most visited museum is being run.
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  • Teen drug use remains low, but survey finds small rise in heroin and cocaine use

    Teen drug use remains low, but survey finds small rise in heroin and cocaine use
    By MIKE STOBBE, AP Medical Writer
    NEW YORK (AP) — Teen use of alcohol, nicotine and marijuana remains at record lows, according to national survey results released Wednesday.
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  • Travel: Southern California will gets its first St. Regis resort in 2027

    Travel: Southern California will gets its first St. Regis resort in 2027
    Luxury at St. Regis doesn’t just mean champagne flutes and marble lobbies — sometimes it’s a guilty pleasure waiting in your room.
    That point was made as clear as Riedel crystal during a recent weekender at The St. Regis Kanai in Mexico’s Yucatán. Thanks to a pre‑stay survey that asked for favorite indulgences, the ocean‑view unit was furnished with a box of Cap’n Crunch and bottle of milk. Even sweeter than the cereal was the note the
  • When measles hit West Texas, school absences soared and it wasn’t just sick kids who were out

    When measles hit West Texas, school absences soared and it wasn’t just sick kids who were out
    By MAKIYA SEMINERA and DEVI SHASTRI
    When a measles outbreak hit West Texas this year, school absences surged to levels far beyond the number of children who likely became sick, according to a study, as students were excluded or kept home by their families to minimize the spread of the disease.
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  • What Americans think about giving cash as holiday gifts, according to a new poll

    What Americans think about giving cash as holiday gifts, according to a new poll
    By LEANNE ITALIE and AMELIA THOMSON-DEVEAUX
    NEW YORK (AP) — Welcome to exhausted America 2025: Most adults are more than a little fine with doling out cash as gifts, and many plan to be asleep before midnight on New Year’s Eve, according to a new AP-NORC poll.
    Related Articles ‘Buck Rogers’ star Gil Gerard dies at 82 Texas woman arrested for hiding razor blades in loaves of bread at Mississippi Walmart stores Last US cents sold at auction for a sum of $16.76 million were
  • Senate passes $901 billion defense bill that pushes Hegseth for boat strike video

    Senate passes $901 billion defense bill that pushes Hegseth for boat strike video
    By STEPHEN GROVES
    WASHINGTON (AP) — The Senate gave final passage to an annual military policy bill Wednesday that will authorize $901 billion in defense programs while pressuring Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth to provide lawmakers with video of strikes on alleged drug boats in international water near Venezuela.
    Related Articles Jack Smith tells lawmakers his team developed ‘proof beyond a reasonable doubt’ against Trump Republicans defy Speaker Johnson to
  • Senate Democrats grill FCC leader over Jimmy Kimmel controversy

    Senate Democrats grill FCC leader over Jimmy Kimmel controversy
    By JOEY CAPPELLETTI and MATT SEDENSKY, Associated Press
    WASHINGTON (AP) — Senate Democrats hammered the Federal Communications Commission’s leader Wednesday for pressuring broadcasters to take Jimmy Kimmel off the air, suggesting he was politicizing an independent agency and trampling the First Amendment.
    FCC Chairman Brendan Carr, appearing before the Senate Commerce Committee, was peppered with questions over his criticism of Kimmel, the ABC late-night host who drew Carr’s ir

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