Vue lecture
NFL’s Commanders, Washington DC agree near-$4bn stadium deal
- Venue will be built near the site of historic RFK Stadium
- 170-acre project also includes green space and housing
Washington’s NFL franchise is set to return to the US capital as part of an agreement between the organization and the District of Columbia government to build a new stadium as part of a project totaling nearly $4bn.
Mayor Muriel Bowser said Monday the District of Columbia and the Commanders reached an agreement to construct a new home for the football team in the city at the site the old RFK Stadium, the place the franchise called home for more than three decades. It would open in 2030, with groundbreaking expected next year, pending DC city council approval.
Continue reading...© Photograph: Andrew Harnik/AP
© Photograph: Andrew Harnik/AP
Celebrity birthdays for the week of May 4-10
© Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.
Kim Kardashian’s Paris robbery trial begins nearly a decade after $10M heist
Mob of Orthodox Jewish men chases woman after protest at Brooklyn synagogue
Woman, who requested anonymity, says ‘a group of 100 men’ followed her, shouting threats and kicking her
A Brooklyn woman said she feared for her life as she was chased, kicked, spit at and pelted with objects by a mob of Orthodox Jewish men who mistook her as a participant in a protest against Israel’s far-right security minister.
The assault, recorded by a bystander, unfolded on Thursday near the global headquarters of the Chabad Lubavitch movement in Crown Heights, where an appearance by Itamar Ben-Gvir set off clashes between pro-Palestinian activists and members of the neighborhood’s large Orthodox Jewish community.
Continue reading...© Photograph: AP
© Photograph: AP
Conclave to elect a new pope will start on May 7, cardinals decide
Conclave to elect new pope begins May 7 as cardinals gather to decide next pontiff
One dead after boat crashes into ferry carrying more than 40 people in Florida
Police declare ‘mass casualty incident’ due to the number of injuries, and say boat that caused accident fled the scene
One person has died and several were injured on Sunday when a boat crashed into a ferry off the Memorial Causeway Bridge in Florida and then fled the scene, authorities said.
The Clearwater police department posted on X that there were multiple injuries and the crash had been declared “a mass casualty incident” by the Clearwater fire & rescue department due to the number of injuries.
Continue reading...© Photograph: Jefferee Woo/AP
© Photograph: Jefferee Woo/AP
Canada set to vote in election overshadowed by Trump’s tariff and annexation threats
Liberal party looked headed for defeat until American president began threatening Canada's economy and sovereignty
© AP
1 dead as Florida authorities declare a ‘mass casualty’ in boat crash near Clearwater bridge
Anthony Edwards powers furious Timberwolves’ rally for Game 4 win that puts Lakers on brink
Greenland’s PM says island can’t be bought, calls Trump’s statements disrespectful
Trump says U.S. won’t recognize Indigenous People’s Day alongside Columbus Day
Greenland not a ‘piece of property’ to be bought and never will be, says new prime minister
Drag performer Jiggly Caliente from 'RuPaul's Drag Race' franchise dies at 44 after hospitalization
© 2021 Invision
Bucs sign 464lb ‘unicorn’ Desmond Watson as undrafted free agent
- Florida tackle impressed teams with size and strength
- Watson would have been heaviest-ever draft pick
Former Florida defensive tackle Desmond Watson, a 6ft 6in, 464lb prospect, is signing with his hometown Tampa Bay Buccaneers as an undrafted free agent.
Watson, who grew up in Plant City about 20 miles east of Tampa, announced the move on social media. He had been hoping to get selected in the later rounds of the draft on Saturday, where he would have become the heaviest pick in NFL history. But no team gambled on the run-stopper.
Continue reading...© Photograph: James Gilbert/Getty Images
© Photograph: James Gilbert/Getty Images
Fears Trump’s deep-sea mining order will irreparably harm ecosystems
Environment groups say Thursday order ignores effort to adopt rules to prevent harmful mining of ocean floor
Environmental groups are decrying an executive order signed by Donald Trump to expedite deep-sea mining for minerals, saying it could irreparably harm marine ecosystems and ignores an ongoing process to adopt international rules for the practice.
Trump’s Thursday order directed the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration to fast-track permits for companies to mine the ocean floor in both US and international waters.
Continue reading...© Photograph: Gustavo Graf Maldonado/Reuters
© Photograph: Gustavo Graf Maldonado/Reuters