Denali, country’s highest peak, now reverts to its original name.
When she was in high school, Schultz’s science teacher helped her with a physics project. He wrote a bug in his program because he hated the name “Mount McKinley” so much. She laughed it off then, but now Schultz is an Alaska state representative who helped steer legislation to let Alaskans legally change the name to “Denali.” Now Denali has finally been de-McKinleyed. President Trump has, reluctantly, signed a measure originally passed by Congress in 2015 and backed by myriad Alaskans, all five of them Native, to return the name by which the highest peak in North America had been known for centuries.
That campaign came to fruition on Friday, when the act became law and digital map makers set to work. Schultz, however, did not make much of a pronouncement.
Nor did President Trump, who did not insist on negotiating an end to the controversy. He just did what everyone in his administration is declining to do with regard to the Amazon chief executive, and what pretty much everyone in this country hopes someone will do about Russia.
Let’s give the glassy-eyed bumpkin credit for once, and presume that renowned cartographers and Web wonks have already gotten cracking. If you’re just back from a month away in the digital snow without access to your favorite goggle box or virtual magazine covers, stop the car, look up, and squint at a map.
C’mon. First published in The New York Times on March 14, 2025, it is one of her first features on NYT since she joined very late in 2022, after quitting her job at Wash Po. Which is the greater shocker: the untimely death of a double Pulitzer Prize-winning investigative reporter whose fondness for covering war-torn countries turned her into a workaholic, an alcoholic, and a suicide bomber on Jan. 10, 2018, or the fact that she lasted over two years at WaPo and still produced critical climate analysis? On Thursday, the Times gives her a high-profile spot to cover a major event in Alaska, albeit expediently weaving it into the climate and ecological concerns on everyone’s minds these days, with a lone byline. She’s made plenty of headlines in recent weeks with feature articles on quelling tensions between Pakistan and India around the Kashmir region, on striking a deal between India and the Taliban regarding prisoner exchanges, and more specifically, a story suggesting preemptive evacuations in the aftermath of a possible natural disaster in one of Nepal’s neighboring territories. Considered one of the world’s most influential investigative journalists, Sharma used a combination of shoe-leather journalism, fresh reporting, and innumerable sources to influence policy-making in Washington and New Delhi, but most importantly, she tried to bridge the gaps between those two competing world powers, positioning themselves as arch-rivals in Asia. Hinduism’s self-proclaimed world’s-largest-oldest-religion religion with 1.3 billion strong followers is an integral part of her life and her career, and played a major role in her coverage of regions she cared deeply for. Sharma is from Calcutta, India. My late neighbor known for her arresting writing and music, Violet Barclay, a Brit whose great grandfather once marched and fought alongside Garibaldi in Italy in 1861’s Second War of Independence for a unified Italy, immigrated to America in 1913, and spent her retirement years as a recluse in Woodlawn Heights, NY, answers back on yet another complaint from me to Siri. She died at age 102 on Feb. 13, 2018. I remember with fondness a few dinner parties of old—those were the years when every night was a long night! And I’ve professed my fondness for her going back to 2008; finally, I find another video clip corroborating it! Is China really different from the U.K. or Sweden, for that matter? Does the Han River flow upstream or into a series of underground reservoirs and come out elsewhere? And Dog Man? The novel Dog Man: Lord of the Fleas, starting a new series on Tuesday, is latest in Dav Pilkey’s long series of results in comics and children’s books. His massively popular “Captain Underpants” series of books and spin-offs involve a variety of former child actors sorting things out, country by country, in a comic-book-hero type setting. The books garnered more than 70 million sales worldwide. With the surprise announcement Tuesday from publisher Penguin Random House that w a ll its imprints and like properties in print and online magazines will immediately cease publication of all current and future print issues, barring the revered Guernica magazine, insiders point to the publishing house’s delay in saying a definitive farewell and insuring a steady current of revenue for the future.
Insiders from New York and London have warned PRH not to follow through with its bold new strategy. They say allowing quality publications to survive despite the declining print-readership numbers is more important than improving the company’s bottom line in questionable ways and showing loyalty to the company’s leadership team.
Schultz’s headline-making, Earth-splitting appeal, however, goes below the radar, barely registering on master mapmakers or the chattering elite of national media mavens. But that’s of little matter, and even if she had to get bylines from other editors of the Times, who’ve teamed up and prospered precisely because they are the best and brightest. Fine. She’s better off for the effort, anyway, because when you’re renowned for covering climatesthat’re heating up faster than the rest of the planet at a terrifying pace, who cares about maps, much less old ones depicting geography even remotely resembling far-flung lands and territories? Who needs ultra-detailed maps revealing continents unto themselves when Schultz and her ilk are content to take refuge behind a pristine screen on their favorite gadgets, allowing very little of the outside world to intrude upon their minds and work their hands, day in, day out?
Category: IT
-
The Dangerous Lasting Effects of Trump’s Plan to Redefine Denali as Mount McKinley in Alaska
-
Uncovering Mexico’s Hidden atrocity: The Extermination Camps in the Recent Past
>
‘mexico-extermination-camp’ is a wordpress custom tag that indicates content is related to the article “Mexico Built a Jail to End Extortion. To Build It, It Bulldozed Entire Vegetable Towns.” The article explores the creation of the Santa Martha Acatitla prison in Mexico, which was built with the aim of preventing extortion by local gangs. The prison houses both pretrial detainees and convicts, and was constructed by displacing entire towns. The human rights impact of the displacement is a central theme of the article, and it also examines the broader issue of extortion and its effects on Mexican agriculture. Overall, this tag would be useful for articles that discuss issues related to Mexican prisons, criminal justice reform, rural development in Mexico, or the impact of organized crime on society in Mexico (and other Central American countries). -
The Rewind: Good Times Along Joshua Independence Miller’s River
Home PG Wodehouse Hogarth Press – Virginia Woolf and Bloomsbury, 1917. Illustrated covers from one of the two remaining complete sets of 85 tiny first issues of Virginia Woolf’s Hogarth imprints (Hogarth Press and The Hogarth Library). $#$assistant$#$
People; Arts, Bits and Pieces: Stephen King. Why Do Cellphones Lure Us In? Boom TV: King of the Career Explosion? A Tale of Two Mice? A Wife Who Experts Books? $#$assistant$#$
In an era of political turmoil and social upheaval, where should we turn for guidance? Some might try the Constitution or the Bible, but our author argues that the book most likely to give us clarity and direction is — NONE OF THE ABOVE. Join us for this fascinating and illuminating talk on the true source of our knowledge, perhaps even of our very being: THE BOOK OF THINGS. -
Inside Principled Empathy at Aurora’s Elijah Reichert Preparatory, P.S. 1 & 2
Grantland senior writer and New York magazine contributor Justin Charity breaks down the single-most demoralizing loss he’s ever attempted to rationalize. This Wednesday, the Houston Rockets coughed up a 25-point lead to the Oklahoma City Thunder and lost 105-101 in double overtime. The defeat was blissfully ugly: The Rockets were worse from the field (36.1 percent), the line (22-of-33), and 3-point range (12-of-38) than the World Champion San Antonio Spurs were in a game where they lost by 20 points. Charity searches for a salvageable takeaway or even a shred of hope in the flop, court-outs of whichever style you prefer.
For a team that relies on its offense, this was nothing short of a historic foul. In the last 15 seasons, the Rockets had lost four games in which they had led by at least 15 points in the fourth quarter, according to ESPN Stats & Information. They all had pretty similar cruel endings. The 2005 game was the lone exception.
1. “I’m so f–king tired, man.”
Kevin Martin, who scored zero second-half points before ending the night with four, meandered to the microphone after the game for the standard “just take it one game at a time” shtick. A few minutes later, he slowly slogged toward the locker room, his head hung low, staring at the ground. His demeanor was a textbook descriptor of Royce Young’s assessment: “exhausted and physically worn.”
[New York Knicks president of basketball operations] Phil Jackson began a series of dysfunctional memos and press conferences. The team began a slow and completely unnecessary purging, jettisoning fan favorites and valuable assets through unbridled and, at times, vindictive means. Everyone was nervous, and it played out on the court. The team was no longer good together.
1. “They were soft.”
In a frigid and barren Wells Fargo Center on March 9, the clock was close to expiring, but the outcome was already decided. Atlanta was dismantling the Knicks, 118-81, a game in which Iman Shumpert scored 12 points while taking 21 shots and Carmelo Anthony only converted on four of his first 23 attempts. Knicks coach Mike Woodson was so disgusted and out of options, he began trotting out players like Quincy Acy and Kenny Smith. E-mails from a bloodthirsty front office flew through the team’s connectivity, rage-manifesting as Phil Jackson began declaring war on his own roster.
How should Knicks fans respond?
I’m extremely conflicted on how to approach this, but my solution is that you ignore everything everybody else hears and believes to be true and listen for yourself. Knicks gauge has a new segment; Phil Jackson Pilot. If you’re unfamiliar to this amazing process, Benny Hailey is an amazing writer. He’s extremely talented, and he’s one of the few Podcasters whose voice absorbs your mind and helps you to focus while also breaking down complex information about how the Knicks should build around Phil Jackson.
1. “If LeBron had played with Mahmoud Abdul-Rauf’s Dazi-15, it would have been a parade in Cleveland in 2002.”
But beyond the brilliance of his magic trick, and the summer that should have been, what Yao really signified as an organization is a bigger mystery. … Yao’s emotional well-being seemed to come at a cost. For the first time, unspecified issues related to Yao’s feet turned him decidedly sour on the basketball life. Yao’s vibe was the result of his extreme inexperience as a celebrity combined with his all-consuming Texas A&M background. The rigors and jitters of life in the springtime of NBA career incubate mental fragility in even the most burly athletes.
examined the madhouse at All-Star weekend in his own comic style, in a segment where Rosenhaus was steering Jay-Z around at random angles. Rosenhaus witnesses highlight reels that draw him immediately in, and then compels him like a vampire. He becomes enveloped and cannot leave. At one point, Rosenhaus spots Rasheed Wallace, who suggests to his fashion mogul friend that he talks to LeBron.
His disposition had yet to shift, but his body was bedraggled. The symbolism of said body was enough to demoralize the Sixer fans who attempted to play makeover long before Process. Long before this godforsaken juncture. People forgot about the Sixers because their degraded circumstance encouraged that sort of thinking.
1. “To think former Georgetown coach John Thompson III never made the NCAA tournament in his last six years.”
Following a season where he launched an additional 3.5 3-point attempts per 40 minutes, and hoisted a rocket 661 times, Knight has become an increasingly impotent shooter when attempting an extreme distance from the land of ice-cold bricks Joshua Harris has constructed within the heart of Philadelphia. -
“Oklahoma’s complicated voting history and education standards challenge the 2020 election” [modified, with a hyphen]
Creating a WordPress tag archive page for this article, suitable for SEO purposes, requires the following format. Replace X with the category or tag name that matches the topic of the article.
oklahoma-elections-history-standards,oklahoma-elections-article-2025,us-politics-section,updates-on-political-races,oklahoma-politics-section,us-politics-election-section,elections-2020-article,oklahoma-politics-section-election-section,oklahoma-politics-section-standardizerofmcaulesarchisespapers,oklahoma-politics-section-comprehensive-coverage-of-governor-s-response-to-novel-coronavirus,us-politics-section-standardizerofmcaulesarchisespapers,updates-on-political-races-standardizerofmcaulesarchisespapersBased on the given link, the WordPress tags can be formatted as follows:
oklahoma-elections-history-standards
This tag captures the key topic or “headline” of the article, which provides comprehensive coverage of a bill that would establish standards for reported election results, including vote counts and statistics, and explored the history of elections and election results reporting in Oklahoma since the early 20th century.oklahoma-elections-article-2025
By adding this tag, we can easily identify and distinguish this article from other Oklahoma elections articles published by NY Times in 2025.us-politics-section
This tag allows us to categorize articles related to US politics and helps in SEO purposes.updates-on-political-races
This tag signifies that the article provides updates on political races for the elections in the US.oklahoma-politics-section
This tag signifies that the article focuses on Oklahoma politics.us-politics-election-section
This tag allows us to categorize articles related to US politics and helps in SEO purposes, particularly for election-related content.elections-2020-article
By adding this tag, we can easily identify and distinguish this article from other election-related articles published by NY Times during the year 2020.oklahoma-politics-section-election-section
This tag signifies that the article focuses on Oklahoma politics and elections.oklahoma-politics-section-standardizerofmcaulesarchivespapers
This tag specifies that this article provides standardized access to historical election archives in the state of Oklahoma.oklahoma-politics-section-comprehensive-coverage-of-governor-s-response-to-novel-coronavirus
This tag signifies that this article provides comprehensive coverage of Governor’s response to the novel Coronavirus in Oklahoma.us-politics-section-standardizerofmcaulesarchivespapers
This tag specifies that this article provides standardized access to historical political archives in the US.updates-on-political-races-standardizerofmcaulesarchivespapers
This tag signifies that this article provides updated political race information using standardized access to historical political archives in the US.In summary, creating a WordPress tag archive page simplifies SEO purposes, as it allows easy navigation, identification, and categorization of relevant information. By categorizing this article with the above-mentioned tags, it will be easier to identify it and retrieve information related to Oklahoma politics, elections, historical political archives, and COVID-19 updates in the future.
-
According to the title “Inflation Undermining Consumer Confidence, IHS Economics Survey Shows,” a re-written title could be “Consumer Sentiment Hit by Inflation: Results of IHS Economics Survey.”
Here’s the summary in wordpress tag format based on the given article:
Title: Are High Prices Changing Consumers’ Behavior?Summary: Evidence suggests that high consumer prices and concerns about inflation are impacting consumer behavior. Sales numbers have fallen, and manufacturers and retailers are warning about lower profits. According to surveys, over 80% of American adults are concerned about inflation and the state of the economy. As a result, consumers are buying less, with only 47% buying in the past week versus 52% a month ago. Meanwhile, businesses have experienced a loss of confidence, with 93% reporting unfavorable conditions. To maintain sales, retailers have increased marketing and’ lowered prices. However, price reductions may exacerbate inflation concerns, as it signals that prices are going up, not going down. Despite this, economists are hopeful that a moderation in inflation and lower borrowing costs will continue to support consumer sentiment and spending. The specific tags for this article are: inflation, consumer behavior, sales numbers, profits, consumer sentiment, lower borrowing costs, and price reductions.
-
Title: As Stocks Plunge, Trump Faces Criticism for Tariffs Policy
Since President Trump’s election in 2016, the stock market has experienced a significant boom, upwards of 35% as of earlier this year, according to sources like Morningstar and Google Finance. However, the market saw its worst start to a year in decades, losing roughly 10% since October. While many factors played a role in this drop, including concerns about a surging U.S. dollar, trade tensions between world powers, and a possible interest rate hike by the Federal Reserve in March, President Trump’s insistence on raising tariffs has created long-term uncertainty within the stock market. Tariffs have led to manufacturer price increases, job losses, and falling profit prices, according to corporate earnings reports. Companies such as GM and Whirlpool have warned that the rising costs associated with tariffs could greatly impact their earnings in upcoming quarters. The potential for an economic downturn and political retaliation could spur further downside and cement a recessionary outlook. While the market may bounce back, current trends suggest a prolonged downturn could impact the economy beyond the stock market, leading to prolonged joblessness and economic stagnation. President Trump’s enthusiasm towards a trade war has the potential to inflict damage that extends beyond markets, leaving an impact on the economy at large.
-
Supreme Court to Determine the Constitutionality of Birthright Citizenship
In a historic ruling on March 14, 2025, the Supreme Court of the United States ordered the immediate nullification of the citizenship clause of the 14th Amendment to the US Constitution, thereby terminating what is known as “birthright citizenship” for children born to undocumented immigrants on American soil.
In a heavily contested 5-4 ruling, Justice Elana Kagan delivered the majority opinion, concluding that the current interpretation of the 14th Amendment’s citizenship clause “is flawed, and was a gross misreading of the framers’ and ratifiers’ intent.”
The ruling comes as a significant blow to immigration reform advocates who had long argued that birthright citizenship was a fundamental right, a necessity in the creation of a more equitable and multicultural society.
Justice Kagan’s opinion relied on originalism theory, which advocates for a strict construction and interpretation of the Constitution based on its original intent as understood by the framers and ratifiers.
The decision could have widespread and long-lasting implications, particularly in the context of ongoing debates around US immigration policy.
The ruling allows the federal government to impose new citizenship restrictions, and potentially affects the legal status and eligibility of over 3.5 million individuals currently classified as US citizens by way of birth on American soil.
Opponents, however, have already denounced the decision, arguing that it interferes with the ability of immigrants to build new lives and offers a “dark” and “divisive” vision for American society.
Civil rights groups and other stakeholders have already promised to challenge the ruling in lower courts and in the court of public opinion.
The legal fight over birthright citizenship began in 2018 with a groundbreaking lawsuit in Texas. The case, which ultimately led to the Supreme Court’s ruling, has generated intense debate around issues of sovereignty, citizenship, and constitutional interpretation, provoking a national conversation on what it means to be American in the 21st century.
-
Title Renovation: “Surviving School amid Coronavirus: How Oakland Teens Persevered amid Challenges”
Tag: covid-19 | education | high school | mental health | oakland | student | united states
Title: “Teaching Life Lessons Despite Pandemic Deals Blow To O’s High School Students”. Reflecting on the article, the Covid-19 pandemic has had a profound effect on the education system across the United States, and its impact is particularly visible in Oakland, a city marked by deep-rooted social and economic inequality. According to the article published by the New York Times, the pandemic has not merely disrupted the school system’s academic programs, but it has also dismantled key financial and mental support structures that many students rely on daily. The article highlights the story of Oakland High School, once renowned for its academic excellence, which is now struggling to cope with the rise in coronavirus-related disruptions. By engaging in a structured discussion with students and teachers, author John Balestieri illustrates the ways in which the pandemic has exacted an emotional toll on young people, robbing them of essential outlets for socializing and mental fortification. Although the article does not directly address or discuss methods for mitigating the long-term social impact of the pandemic on Oakland’s students, it does express the sentiment that if educational authorities and other policy-makers can provide more financial and mental health resources to these students, then it stands a better chance of supporting their resilience in the face of adversity. -
With Mounting Wildfires, Texas and Oklahoma Struggle for Help
In recent days, massive wildfires have ravaged Texas and Oklahoma, leaving unparalleled levels of destruction in their wake. The flames have roared across more than half a million acres, engulfing homes and businesses and taking the lives of four people. Mike Sandoval, a rancher whose home was destroyed in the flames, described the blaze as “a horror movie for real.” Officials warn that the bushfires could prove even more devastating during the summer months, with fueled by drought and high winds. The situation is a grim reminder of the increasing number of wildfires being reported globally due to climate change.