Unexplained ground stop at SFO sparks fears of major travel disruption
A ground stop has been issued for San Francisco International Airport (SFO) in California, the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) announced in an advisory on Sunday.
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A ground stop has been issued for San Francisco International Airport (SFO) in California, the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) announced in an advisory on Sunday.
Dancer, dog owner, bank robber. Germanyโs most wanted woman, Daniela Klette, has been sentenced to 13 years in prison after decades on the run. Deborah Cole and Jason Burke report To her friends and neighbours, there was nothing extraordinary about Claudia Ivone. As our Berlin correspondent, Deborah Cole, explains, the silver-haired 67-year-old had spent years living in the same apartment in a bohemian neighbourhood of West Berlin. She led an ordinary life: she owned a dog, went shopping and pursued an unusual hobby as an active member of a local capoeira dance group. Continue reading...
It was in 2024 that officer Paul Birch decided he could no longer remain in the police.
Internet stars Jesse Ridgway, 33, and Ashley Ridgway, 31, announced they had made the 'difficult decision' to terminate their pregnancy two months after learning their unborn child had Down syndrome.
Modern Art, London The mathematically named new works of Along the River are disorienting, illusive and seem to offer a flash of the secret sequences that underpin the physical world Why do we find things beautiful? More precisely, why do some paintings of coloured dots in rippling patterns inspire in me something like revelation? The idea that beauty is the feeling you get when encountering truth is unfashionable in the arts, but lingers in the sciences. The physicist Paul Dirac once proposed that it is more important that a formula is beautiful than that it can be proven: when a perfectly beautiful theory produces results that cannot be real, he argued, then we should not discard the theory but reconsider what is real. Since the 1970s, Terry Winters has been rebuilding that bridge between art and science. Taking inspiration from disciplines including botany โ his early paintings, particularly, evoke sprouting pods and tangled roots โ engineering, computer modelling and cybernetics, his paintings might be understood as diagrammatic approximations of the patterns that govern everything from the division of cells to the constellation of stars. If every era has to renew its standards of beauty to reflect new understandings of how the world is constructed, then Winters comes as close to providing that model as any living painter. Continue reading...
Fears are growing that AI developments are threatening the future of Ireland's lucrative tech sector and the capital's glitzy social media hub.
The movie adaptation of Gary Owenโs acclaimed play Iphigenia in Splott, Effi o Blaenau, is released this month. Here, its director and crew explain why they relocated the film to a post-industrial mining town โ and refused to make it in English The one-woman play Iphigenia in Splott was first performed in 2015. Eleven years on, Gary Owenโs reworking of Greek tragedy, transplanted to working-class Splott in Cardiff, has earned its place as a modern classic. It reimagines the mythological heroine Iphigenia as Effie, a young woman filling her days drinking vodka out of a mug in her dressing gown. The play is about poverty and social inequality, closures and cuts, services scraped to the bone by austerity. Its most recent five-star Guardian review in 2022 advised: โEveryone should see this.โ One person who did was Leisa Gwenllian, a final-year drama student from north Wales. โI was on the front row with my mate,โ says Gwenllian, 24, drinking mint tea in a London hotel. โI can remember thinking: wow! A Welsh woman with a strong Cardiff accent on the stage at the Lyric [in Hammersmith, London], thatโs what itโs all about.โ At the Oxford School of Drama, Gwenllian was mainly studying the classics alongside people with different accents and backgrounds from her own. โTo see yourself on stage is really powerful.โ Continue reading...
The outspoken crime novelist talks his provocative new book, his hatred of technology and why the film adaptation of LA Confidential is a โturkeyโ James Ellroy does not own a computer, his publicist explains, so will a phone interview be OK? When the self-proclaimed โmad dog of American crime fictionโ picks up his landline at the appointed hour, it transpires that he has never owned a mobile phone either. Nor sent an email. Nor figured out how to turn on his ex-wife Helen Knodeโs TV set. โEverything is very complex and itโs satanic to me, the dependency that people have on computers,โ Ellroy, 78, says cheerfully in a bass baritone drawl from his pad in Denver, Colorado. โI donโt engage in internet chat and I understand thereโs all this crazy shit on the internet and people with the most outlandish beliefs on Godโs green Earth.โ Continue reading...
Terrific acting, especially an intriguingly ambiguous turn by child actor Julianna Layne, ground this twisty little horror debut When Ellie (Jessica Rothe) wakes up in bed in a house she doesnโt recognise, next to a man she doesnโt know, she naturally assumes the worst, in debut feature director BT Mezaโs creepy thriller. Understandably, she freaks out, and is even more disconcerted when a little girl calling her mommy appears, distressed that Ellie doesnโt know who she is either. Has she been kidnapped? Why would this girl play along with the kidnapperโs ruse? At this point, Bruce (an excellent performance from Joseph Cross) intervenes, reassuring his daughter and explaining to Ellie that she has memory loss. He is her husband, he says, and Alice (Julianna Layne) is their little girl. If youโve ever watched a film before, youโll know there are twists and turns coming. This nifty little movie keeps you guessing and when it eventually shows its hand, thereโs still plenty of mileage left in the characters. Layne gives a beautifully calibrated performance as Alice; itโs initially genuinely difficult to work out if sheโs an innocent caught up in a terrifying situation or somehow in on whatever is happening โ and thatโs exactly what this character needs. With a film that wants to tease the viewer as to exactly what genre weโre watching, itโs ideal to see a kid played with a degree of ambiguity. Continue reading...
Donald Trump has gone further than ever in venting his rage against Benjamin Netanyahu, but donโt be fooled: itโs Israelโs PM who remains the master manipulator here, explains world affairs editor Sam Kiley
Here we explain how much you need save in your pension, how much you'll need to retire early - and what you can do to turbocharge your savings.
Long-range summer forecasts have been issued and they point to warmer and drier condtions compared to average, as Simon King explains
When the Daily Mail pressed Dr. Oz to explain the rationale behind such frequent testing if the President's health is as robust as claimed, Oz responded with a key word.
Trump has gone further than ever in venting his rage against Netanyahu, but donโt be fooled; it is Israelโs PM who remains the master manipulator here, explains world affairs editor Sam Kiley
This tale of the Studio 54 stunner-turned-extraterrestrial who lured models to his Manhattan apartment for sex, money โ or to give them mint face masks โ is fascinating โฆ yet fails to explain quite why so many believed his baloney Documentaries about cults all have the same task, at which they nearly all fail: explaining exactly how so many people fell under the spell of a man (itโs always a man) who was, to outside observers, so obviously a damaged charlatan. None of it makes sense; it wouldnโt count as a cult if it did. Bring Me the Beauties: A Model Cult does a messy job of telling the story of Frederick von Mierers, who spent the 1980s luring models into his spiritual enlightenment society, Eternal Values. Von Mierersโ life was all lies, chaos and mystery and it would be hard to set it out coherently, however diligently you tried. But this is like trying to keep up with an erratic bar-room raconteur who keeps glossing over the important bits so they can skip on to the next bit of gossip. Admittedly, each new piece of info is wildly juicy. Continue reading...
In todayโs newsletter: Its software is used from health services to militaries. But controversies and criticism of the $375bn company are leading some to ask if Palantir is too powerful Good morning. The Peter Mandelson story keeps unfolding. Peter Walker explains here what is in the latest release of documents, and Henry Dyer takes a look at the key papers missing from the latest disclosures. But today we are covering another major story โ Palantir. Few companies attract controversy more than Palantir. Since the pandemic, the US data analytics company has grown voraciously, using its AI-driven software to make sense of intractable datasets for customers around the world. For the NHS, it analyses patient records; for the US military, itโs focused on targets in Iran. Palantirโs products are widely used, with the business now worth $375bn. UK politics | Peter Mandelson was receiving sensitive security briefings about the Foreign Officeโs work, and was in discussions with the head of MI6, before he had completed the developed vetting process, documents reveal. Ukraine | Russian air raids on major Ukrainian centres including Kyiv, Dnipro and Kharkiv killed at least five people and wounded dozens by early morning on Tuesday, authorities said. Environment | More than a million jobs, higher wages, nearly half a trillion pounds in investment in the pipeline โ the UKโs green economy is powering ahead, according to research by the countryโs leading business organisation. US news | Donald Trump is reconsidering whether to keep pressing for a $1.8bn fund to compensate his allies, a person familiar with his thinking said, as the justice department paused the program to comply with a court order. UK news | Sir Alan Bates has said that the schemes set up to compensate post office operators over the Horizon IT scandal have been an โutter disasterโ and that the government should not be involved in running them. Continue reading...
Melbourne woman Rachael Hudson explained the thief broke into her car and stole her husband Aaron's wallet on April 17.
The man behind Redmond's direct billing model and its geo rollout explains why the new version forgets the channel to its cost
Interior secretary fights back against Freedom 250โs โpartisanโ reputation as it operates out of Trumpโs White House
Findings add to growing efforts to explain why cancer rates are increasing among younger adults worldwide Poor sleep may be fuelling the global rise in under-50s being diagnosed with cancer, two large studies suggest. The number of younger people diagnosed with the disease has risen by almost 80% in three decades. Worldwide cases of early-onset cancer increased from 1.82m in 1990 to 3.26m in 2019, while cancer deaths among people in their 40s, 30s or younger rose by 27%. Continue reading...