Ryan Day chirps back at Pat McAfee's comment about Indiana Ryan Day hasn't proven to be a real mic-drop head coach during his tenure with Ohio State. He is leading one of the best college football programs in the country but isn't the most outspoken coach. 11/22/2024 - 1:47 pm | View Link
'Morning Joe' continues to lose viewers each day since MSNBC hosts revealed Mar-a-Lago meeting with Trump MSNBC's "Morning Joe" continues to see its audience evaporate since co-hosts Joe Scarborough and Mika Brzezinski told viewers they met with President-elect Trump. 11/22/2024 - 7:46 am | View Link
Eddie Redmayne’s ‘The Day of the Jackal’ Renewed for Season 2 at Peacock and Sky The Day of the Jackal,' Peacock and Sky's thriller series starring Eddie Redmayne, has been renewed for a second season. 11/22/2024 - 1:01 am | View Link
Planning for D-Day: Preparing Operation Overlord With the July 15 deadline met and the British COS and the British and American commanders in England briefed, it was time to bring the US War Department’s planners into the fold. In August, General George C. Marshall invited Morgan and Barker to Washington, D.C., for a five-day visit that ended up lasting six weeks. 11/20/2024 - 11:15 pm | View Website
D-Day behind Barbed Wire: Hope for POWs Prior to the June 1944 D-Day invasion, thousands of Americans waiting out the war were some of the most avid consumers of news of all kinds. Harold Romm, bombardier on the B-17 Hellsapoppin shot down in April 1943, recorded in his diary, “The first week of my 2nd year as a POW was very dull and no developments of any importance except that ... 11/20/2024 - 9:28 pm | View Website
D-Day Timeline | The National WWII Museum | New Orleans D-Day Timeline On June 6, 1944, Western Allied forces launched Operation Overlord, the massive Allied invasion of Normandy, France, to liberate Nazi-occupied Europe. The timeline below features some of the key events of D-Day, the greatest amphibious landing in history. 11/20/2024 - 5:31 pm | View Website
The Battle of Peleliu: The Forgotten Hell D-Day on Peleliu. With D-Day set for September 15, 1944, an American armada arrived near the Palaus with 868 ships, 129 of which were part of the assault element. The three days of surface fire support and naval air pelting the island had been preceded by strategic aerial bombardment by US Army Air Forces B-24s dropping over 600 tons of bombs. 11/20/2024 - 6:04 am | View Website
D-Day and the Normandy Campaign D-Day. Initially set for June 5, D-Day was delayed due to poor weather. With a small window of opportunity in the weather, Eisenhower decided to go—D-Day would be June 6, 1944. Paratroopers began landing after midnight, followed by a massive naval and aerial bombardment at 6:30 a.m. American forces faced severe resistance at Omaha and Utah ... 11/20/2024 - 4:03 am | View Website
BEIRUT — Diplomats and other officials say there have been several sticking points in ceasefire talks to end the war between Israel and the Lebanese militant group Hezbollah, even as conditions for an agreement appear to be ripe.
Israel’s military has killed nearly all of the militant group’s top leaders, but it continues to fire missiles into Israel.
This year, the U. S. Department of the Interior’s Interior Business Center moved into a new office space in Denver. Building 48 is part of a sprawling complex of government service buildings, the largest concentration of federal agencies outside of Washington D. C. The building has been repurposed several times; it was previously a World War II munitions plant and most recently an aging National Archives and Records Administration warehouse.
Rice is not just a food—it’s the heartbeat of cultures, a unifying thread that has woven together the histories, traditions, and daily lives of countless communities across the globe. For billions of people, rice is more than a staple; it’s a symbol of identity, heritage, and survival. To imagine a world without rice is to imagine a world without culture, a loss that goes beyond the physical and touches the very soul of humanity.
[time-brightcove not-tgx=”true”]
As a chef and founder of Fieldtrip, a rice bowl shop in New York City, and author of The Simple Art of Rice, a cookbook focused on rice, I have dedicated my career to understanding and celebrating this essential grain.
Each year during Native American Heritage Month in November, school classrooms around the country focus on Indigenous history. For educators in Illinois, this fall marks the first school year with a new state mandate to teach Native histories in elementary and high school classrooms, a shift that brings Illinois into alignment with at least 14 other states that require teaching Indigenous histories.
This article is part of The D. C. Brief, TIME’s politics newsletter. Sign up here to get stories like this sent to your inbox.
As word ricochetted around Washington last week that Donald Trump’s pick to lead the Department of Justice was pulling his name amid untenable scrutiny of a dating life alleged to include minors, drugs, and cash, nowhere were the sighs of relief louder than from the DOJ staffers themselves.
[time-brightcove not-tgx=”true”]
“Disaster dodged,” one career prosecutor texted me in the hours that followed Gaetz’s professed self-decided exit.
Over the past two years, we’ve witnessed advances in AI that have captured our imaginations with unprecedented capabilities in language and ingenuity. And yet, as impressive as these developments have been, they’re only the opening act. We are now entering a new era of autonomous AI agents that take action on their own and augment the work of humans.