Lucas: Trump-targeting Dems take page from foul playbook

Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 19:43:52 GMT

Lucas: Trump-targeting Dems take page from foul playbook Who would have thought Donald Trump would be arrested before Vladimir Putin?Or Hunter Biden.But it happened.And unlike Putin, who, holed up in the Kremlin, has adopted a “come and get me” stance, Trump at least had the decency to show up for his arraignment Tuesday.He could have held out at his Florida Mar-a-Lago headquarters protected by his Secret Service detail, like Putin is doing in Moscow.Or he could have said that his antagonist, Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg had no jurisdiction over him.That what Putin’s response when he was indicted for war crimes in March by the International Criminal Court (ICC) in the Hague. He joins such company as the late Libyan dictator Muammar Gaddafi who ended up dead in a ditch.Putin practically snarled at the ICC, in essence asking, “How many divisions does the ICC have?”Which is what Soviet Union dictator Joe Stalin said about the Pope when he was told the Vatican wanted to play a role in the ending of World War II. “How many divisions...

Asian shares mostly fall amid worries about slowing economy

Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 19:43:52 GMT

Asian shares mostly fall amid worries about slowing economy By YURI KAGEYAMA (AP Business Writer)TOKYO (AP) — Asian shares were trading mostly lower Thursday as investors turned their attention to upcoming earnings reports and other economic indicators. Japan’s benchmark Nikkei 225 shed 1.1% in morning trading to 27,507.65. Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 slipped 0.3% to 7,214.90. South Korea’s Kospi fell nearly 0.8% to 2,476.08. Hong Kong’s Hang Seng was virtually unchanged, inching up less than 0.1% to 20,277.01. The Shanghai Composite slipped less than 0.1% to 3,312.22. While efforts to cool inflation by raising interest rates are designed to slow overheated economies, the worry is that central bank policymakers might overdo it, leading to recession. Many regional economies are seeing weakness in exports due to softer demand in major markets like the United States. That has dulled the impact of a rebound in China as its economy recovers from pandemic-related disruptions. Stocks on Wall Street mostly slipped Wedn...

Curtis Sittenfeld & readers have fun with ‘Romantic Comedy’

Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 19:43:52 GMT

Curtis Sittenfeld & readers have fun with ‘Romantic Comedy’ BOOK REVIEW“Romantic Comedy”By Curtis SittenfeldRandom House, $28Grade: A-I am a big fan of Curtis Sittenfeld, and particularly love her reality-adjacent work — riffing on Hillary Clinton in “Rodham,” Laura Bush in “American Wife,” and on “Pride and Prejudice” in “Eligible.” OK, perhaps “Pride and Prejudice” is not an example of reality, but “Eligible” is an example of how much fun Sittenfeld has playing with existing characters and story structures.Here, the reality is “Saturday Night Live,” reimagined as “TNO,” “The Night Owls.” It’s run by Nigel, not Lorne, and “Weekend Update” is called “News Desk,” 30 Rock is called 66, and most of the details — the pitch meetings, the table reads, the run-throughs, the 11:30 airtime — seem to be modeled directly on the many “SNL” memoirs that Sittenfeld said she read as research for t...

Editorial: Warren & Pressley slam bank for wanting loans repaid

Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 19:43:52 GMT

Editorial: Warren & Pressley slam bank for wanting loans repaid In a little more than a month, the COVID pandemic will be over – at least on the books.As has been reported,  the Biden administration plans to let the coronavirus public health emergency expire on May 11. COVID is still here, but this move signals that Capitol Hill sees the pandemic as something more manageable, and no longer the crisis it was three years ago.States have long since opened up, businesses are doing their best to recover, mask mandates are lifted, we’re flying, going to public performances and enjoying a near-full return to normalcy.But in progressive circles, it’s March of 2020, and the wolf is at the door.The wolf, in this case, is in the form of banks who want student borrowers to start making payments on their loans again.The student loan payment pause started in March of 2020, and it allowed federal student loan borrowers  to skip payments. The interest rate on their loans was set to 0%. Pause extensions followed, as did the Administration’...

Dear Abby: Married man meets the love of his life

Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 19:43:52 GMT

Dear Abby: Married man meets the love of his life Dear Abby: I am married, but my wife and I are unhappy and have been for years. We grew apart after 17 years. We tried counseling multiple times; it only reinforces the decision to divorce. I have had two affairs. One lasted six months; the other on and off for the past nine months.The latter lady, “Gayle,” and I have an amazing connection in our lifestyles and beliefs. We even have the same birthday. It’s undeniable. We also have chemistry like no other. The problem is, she doesn’t think we will work. We take breaks, which only lead her to want to see me weeks later.I have professed my love for her and, while she hasn’t said it back, everything points to it. When we are intimate, she cries and tells me how much I mean to her. Gayle is strong-willed, independent and lives her life on her terms. When she makes a decision, it’s final. But not with me — she keeps coming back. I have written her numerous letters declaring my love for her. I get ...

Historic Torrey Pines Lodge to celebrate 100 years

Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 19:43:52 GMT

Historic Torrey Pines Lodge to celebrate 100 years SAN DIEGO -- The Torrey Pines State Natural Reserve's landmark adobe lodge, once the gateway to San Diego and now serving as a visitor center and museum, will be celebrating 100 years this Saturday, park officials said.The event will start at 10 a.m. and last until 2 p.m., the Torrey Pines State Natural Reserve stated on its website.From 1923 to 1933, the one-story, pueblo-style adobe building linked the city with cities to the north when North Torrey Pines Road opened to the east, per officials. Snag tickets to the 2023 San Diego County Fair Concert Series "Originally costing $33,000, the lodge was designed by San Diego architect Richard Requa and largely funded by La Jolla philanthropist Ellen Browning Scripps. A $5 million restoration and rehabilitation are planned to start later this year," Torrey Pines State Natural Reserve said.The lodge was used as a restaurant, snack bar and gift shop to a canteen for soldiers training at nearby Camp Callan during World War II, the reserve...

Are robot waiters the future? Some restaurants think so

Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 19:43:52 GMT

Are robot waiters the future? Some restaurants think so MADISON HEIGHTS, Mich. (AP) — You may have already seen them in restaurants: waist-high machines that can greet guests, lead them to their tables, deliver food and drinks and ferry dirty dishes to the kitchen. Some have cat-like faces and even purr when you scratch their heads. But are robot waiters the future? It’s a question the restaurant industry is increasingly trying to answer.Many think robot waiters are the solution to the industry’s labor shortages. Sales of them have been growing rapidly in recent years, with tens of thousands now gliding through dining rooms worldwide.“There’s no doubt in my mind that this is where the world is going,” said Dennis Reynolds, dean of the Hilton College of Global Hospitality Leadership at the University of Houston. The school’s restaurant began using a robot in December, and Reynolds says it has eased the workload for human staff and made service more efficient.But others say robot waiters aren’t much more than a gimmick that have a long way...

Brazil wrestles with solutions after deadly day care attack

Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 19:43:52 GMT

Brazil wrestles with solutions after deadly day care attack BLUMENAU, Brazil (AP) — Parents in this small city in southern Brazil are struggling with how to explain to their children that a man slaughtered four of their friends, while Brazilians across the country are wondering what should be done to stem an apparently systemic rise of violence in schools.Dozens of mourners gathered at the day care center in Blumenau as evening fell Wednesday to pray, to lay flowers for the victims — aged between 5 and 7 — and to cry. At least four other children were wounded in the attack that shook the nation and put pressure on the government to find solutions.Carlos Kroetz and other parents arrived to collect their children’s backpacks left behind at the center during Wednesday morning’s mayhem. “My daughter thinks a thief came in and ran away without harming anyone,” Kroetz told The Associated Press while holding his 6-year-old’s Minnie Mouse bag. “She knew kids who died. We still have to figure out a way to tell her. For now, she is afraid of going to ...

Massachusetts weighs letting judges order mental health care

Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 19:43:52 GMT

Massachusetts weighs letting judges order mental health care BOSTON (AP) — When Ashoke and Vinita Rampuria’s son returned home after taking a year off from college, to complete his course work, he didn’t seem like himself.“He was unable to complete tasks. He was lying on the sofa,” said Ashoke Rampuria, a resident of Acton, Massachusetts. “He took some jobs, but could not hold them.”In 2011, his son was diagnosed with what Rampuria described as a severe mental illness. He soon began cycling in and out of health care facilities, appearing to get his illness under control and then slipping back once released. In 2021, the couple said their son used a new medication and was able to hold a job for three months, but did not continue on the drug.All along, Rampuria said he and his wife lacked a crucial tool – the power of a judge to order their now 36-year-old son, currently at a psychiatric hospital in Lynn, Massachusetts, into mandatory outpatient care. Massachusetts, along with Connecticut and Maryland, are the only states that don’t give courts...

Future of Borges estate in limbo as widow doesn’t leave will

Published Mon, 23 Dec 2024 19:43:52 GMT

Future of Borges estate in limbo as widow doesn’t leave will BUENOS AIRES, Argentina (AP) — The rights to the works of the late Jorge Luis Borges, considered Argentina’s most internationally significant author of the 20th century, have fallen into limbo because his widow died last month without a will. The revelation this week surprised the country’s literary circles, because Borges’ wife, Maria Kodama, devoted much of her life to fiercely protecting his legacy. She set up a foundation under the writer’s name, but did not detail plans for what should happen after she died, even though she was battling breast cancer.“If there really is no will, it’s surprising,” said Santiago Llach, a writer who is a specialist on Borges’ work. He said the announcement by Kodama’s longtime lawyer, Fernando Soto, that there was no will “generated buzz on social media and elsewhere.”Borges died in 1986 at age 86 and left Kodama, a translator and writer whom he had married earlier that year, as his only heir. They never had children. She died Ma...