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Gold price per ounce on March 30, 2026

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How much is gold worth per ounce today?

As of 9:15 a.m. ET on March 30, 2026, the spot price of gold is $4,576.33 per oz., according to the latest market data. This was an increase of 1.84% or $82.48 from the previous close of $4,493.86.

One year ago, gold was trading at $3,085.57 per ounce. This means the price has increased by 48.31% over the past 12 months.

Key levels to look out for this week:

52 week low: $2,979.29

52 week high: $5,477.79

Gold is trading 16.46% below its 52-week high. It is 53.60% higher than its 52-week low.

What is the historical price of gold?

today 1 week ago 1 month ago 1 year ago
$4,576.33 $4,410.47 $5,278.79 $3,085.57

A week ago, gold was trading at $4,410.47 per ounce. Prices increased by 3.76% compared to a week ago.

A month ago, gold was trading at $5,278.79 per ounce. The price decreased by 13.31% from the previous month.

USA TODAY is an independent publisher and not an investment advisor. The information provided is for educational purposes only and should not be construed as financial, investment, or trading advice. We recommend that you seek independent advice from a qualified professional regarding any specific financial decisions you may make. Trading commodities, futures, and options involves significant risk of loss. Individual investment results may vary. Past performance is not indicative of future results. Prices change rapidly and unpredictably due to factors such as supply/demand, weather, and geopolitical events. Our company assumes no responsibility for any loss or damage arising from the use of the information.

What is driving the price of gold today?

The price of gold is driven by inflation expectations, central bank policies, global economic conditions, and investor demand. The strength of currencies, especially the US dollar, can influence daily prices, as well as physical and industrial demand. For more on the market, read the latest investment news on USA TODAY Money.

What is XAU/USD?

XAU/USD is the ticker symbol used to track the spot price of gold in US dollars.

XAU stands for 1 troy ounce of gold and USD stands for US dollar. The estimated price tells you how many dollars it costs to purchase one ounce.

Prices are usually quoted per troy ounce, which is slightly heavier than a standard ounce.

Spot prices reflect real-time market transactions and serve as a benchmark for futures contracts, ETFs, and retail bullion prices.

how to invest in gold

Investing in gold can be done by buying physical coins and bars, buying ETFs that track the price of gold, or investing in mining stocks. Be sure to weigh costs, storage needs, and risk tolerance before making a decision.

Disclaimer: This USA TODAY Money article was automatically generated using live market data from Alpha Vantage. If you think we made a mistake or have feedback, please use this form.

President Trump says military wants White House banquet hall as ‘hut’ for complex

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President Trump’s military briefing on the project came as he shared architectural drawings with reporters aboard Air Force One.

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WASHINGTON – President Donald Trump says a key part of the $400 million ballroom being built for the White House is a “massive military complex” in its basement that should have been kept secret.

Trump’s explanation came as he unveiled architectural plans for the 90,000-square-foot ballroom, which critics say is out of proportion to the rest of the building. The National Trust for Historic Preservation is fighting the case in federal court, where details of the military aspects of the project have been revealed.

President Trump told reporters on Air Force One on March 29: “Right now, the military is building a massive complex under Ball. That’s come to light because of some stupid lawsuit that was filed recently, but the military is building a massive complex under Ball, and it’s being built right now, and we’re doing very well.”

During the administration of President Franklin Delano Roosevelt, a bunker was built under the east wing to protect the chief executive. The Presidential Emergency Operations Center has been created and updated over the years to protect the president from attacks, including potential nuclear war.

President Trump has already bulldozed the east wing, which was built in 1902 during the administration of Theodore Roosevelt and expanded in 1942 during the administration of Franklin Roosevelt.

President Trump claimed that the White House has needed a ballroom for 150 years because the East Room, the largest room, can only accommodate 125 people for a state dinner. The large event was held in a tent on the South Lawn, and Trump said foreign leaders often get their feet wet because of the wet ground.

President Trump has been touting a new 1,000-person banquet hall that will be built with private funds. He showed reporters a drawing of a ballroom flanked by Corinthian columns and featuring bulletproof and drone-proof windows.

“I think it’s going to be the best banquet hall of its kind anywhere in the world,” President Trump said.

The National Trust for Historic Preservation filed a lawsuit against the ballroom, alleging it was built without the necessary approvals and permission from Congress. U.S. District Judge Richard Leon held a hearing March 17 to consider whether to temporarily block the project.

President Trump addressed the military aspects of the plan at a March 26 Cabinet meeting.

“So it’s no secret now, the military wanted it more than anyone else,” Trump said. “It was supposed to be a secret, but it became a secret because some really unpatriotic people said I don’t care, I don’t care. It’s going to be great.”

Aboard Air Force One, President Trump characterized the ballroom as a haven for military components.

“The banquet hall essentially becomes a warehouse for things that are being built under the military, including drones and everything else,” Trump said.

‘Blue Bloods’ actor Alex Duong dies at age 42 after battling rare cancer

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Comedian Alex Duong has passed away after a year-long battle with a rare and aggressive form of cancer. He was 42 years old.

“It is with very heavy hearts that we share that our dear Alex passed away peacefully this morning surrounded by love and dear friends,” friend Hilary Steele said in a March 28 update shared on Duong’s GoFundMe page. “He is comfortable and thankfully the pain is gone.”

Steele said the day before that Duong had gone into septic shock at the hospital and was “fighting for his life.”

Duong started having headaches in early 2025 and was diagnosed with alveolar rhabdomyosarcoma after someone else noticed that his left eye was bulging one day, Duong told the Los Angeles Times last year. He lost vision in the affected eye and had to pay $400,000 in medical bills within a few months. Duong’s cancer required extensive radiation and chemotherapy, and eventually spread to her spine, leaving her “bedridden” in February.

According to a 2019 report in the International Journal of Applied and Basic Medical Research, alveolar rhabdomyosarcoma is an “aggressive” soft tissue tumor that typically affects children, but in adults it has “a high propensity for local recurrence and metastasis” and “has the poorest prognosis” of rhabdomyosarcoma diagnoses.

The cause of rhabdomyosarcoma is still unknown, and its prevalence is low, with “only a few hundred new cases per year in the United States,” according to the National Library of Medicine.

Duong has numerous television credits, from season 3 of Dexter to 2011’s The Young and the Restless, season 4 of Pretty Little Liars, and Blue Bloods (he had several appearances as Sonny Lee in seasons 12-14). Until his diagnosis, he worked at the Comedy Store in West Hollywood, California, performing stand-up sets.

In August, friends including comedians Ronnie Cheng, Atsuko Okatsuka, Andrea Jing, and Fumi Abe held a benefit comedy show that ultimately raised $10,000 to support Duong and her family.

“Comedians always support each other when the time is right (to be explicit),” Duong told the LA Times about the support he receives. “We know how hard it is to suffer and struggle and scrape by in this lifestyle. That’s why we’re able to do these jokes and keep getting better. It’s a beautiful thing to see in this world, it really is.”

Mr. Duong’s GoFundMe will be used to fund his memorial service, care for his daughter Everest, and other living expenses for a future celebration of life.

Duong leaves behind his wife, Christina, and their 5-year-old daughter, Everest.

A radio call between Duke University and the university reveals both sides of March Madness.

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The radio calls for Connecticut and Duke perfectly summed up the rise and fall of March Madness’ shocking conclusion.

UW overcame a 19-point deficit to surprise top overall seed Duke in the Elite Eight thanks to a deep 3-pointer by Braylon Mullins in the final seconds. It became an instant classic, with radio announcers reacting appropriately to the wild ending.

The most notable reaction was that of Duke’s play-by-play announcer, David Shumate, who seemed to lose consciousness the moment the shot went in. But he later called for a technical foul on Yukon after hitting the bucket, citing Huskies player Malachi Smith’s alleged running onto the court when there was still time left.

“Malachi Smith came off the bench! That should have been a technical!” Shumate said.

Shoemate did not address the allegations of running onto the court again as Duke continued to lose.

For UConn play-by-play announcer Mike Crispino, on the other hand, he screamed the moment the shot went in, an event that encapsulated every emotion a Huskies fan could feel.

“It’s in! Mullins has delivered! Hustle and bustle!” Crispino said.

Full display of the front and back of March.

New Deal Art in Historic Buildings Faces Sale Threat from Trump Administration

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WASHINGTON – Mary Orkin never walked the green marble hallways of the Wilbur J. Cohen Federal Building.

She had never seen the series of priceless murals by famous American artists that stand as a testament to the New Deal in the building that was once slated to house the Social Security Administration.

But Orkin, a California-based art historian and assistant director of the online public archive Living New Deal, is the “grand central station” of President Donald Trump’s growing effort to block the sale of the Cohen Building.

The 1 million-square-foot building, built by the federal government in 1940 near the National Mall, is one of more than 40 buildings on President Trump’s list for immediate sale.

The General Services Administration, an independent agency created in 1949 that manages hundreds of federal properties across the country, has protocols to maintain ownership of taxpayer-owned art and cannot remove it when the government sells federal buildings. But Orkin and a coalition of advocates, art historians and members of Congress fear the Trump administration will ignore them and destroy irreplaceable American heritage.

Orkin said she first felt uneasy in March 2025, when the Trump administration cut 3,000 jobs, including two-thirds of GSA’s art and historic preservation staff. The remaining 11 people are responsible for managing and inspecting the collection’s more than 26,000 works, one of the nation’s oldest and largest public art collections.

Most of the 26,000 works, including paintings, textiles and sculptures, are on loan to museums. The rest are on display in federal buildings across the country. Much of the collection is federally funded New Deal-era art.

“I became very concerned about what was going to happen to all these objects,” she told USA TODAY. “They’re worth a lot of money. They’re ours too.”

Orkin tried to sound the alarm about the potential threat to New Deal art in federal buildings, but was discouraged when few art historians joined her movement. The organization she works for, Living New Deal, aims to document the lasting impact of the New Deal on American life. There is no history of advocacy or litigation.

President Trump then demolished the east wing of the White House and built a new ballroom. He announced plans to paint the Eisenhower Executive Building’s historic granite facade. He then announced plans to close the Kennedy Center for two years while employees carry out extensive renovations.

Immediately there were calls to join Okin.

social security business

In 1988, President Ronald Reagan named the building after Cohen, a longtime public servant who was a key architect of the creation and expansion of America’s social safety net, including both the New Deal and Great Society programs under Presidents Franklin D. Roosevelt and Lyndon B. Johnson.

Mr. Cohen, who died in 1987, was also a mentor to Nancy Altman, president of Social Security Works, a political advocacy group that seeks to expand access to Social Security. She told the group’s executive director, Alex Lawson, to determine whether members were interested in art in the building. The response has been overwhelming, he said.

Lawson said witnessing the destruction of the East Tower was a turning point for many people.

“We watched President Trump break every law that he would use to protect Cohenville,” Lawson said.

He said Social Security Works views the sale of the building and the new owner’s possible destruction of the mural as an attack on Social Security.

“We’re adamant that we’re not going to let them erase the story of Social Security,” Lawson said.

He also realized that Orkin’s knowledge and connections in the art preservation world, combined with his experience and connections on Capitol Hill and in advocacy work, would make for a powerful team.

“We brought in a rowdy activist,” Lawson said. “There are people who say that if they try to bring in bulldozers like they did in the East Tower, we’ll stop the bulldozers, we’ll protest to stop the bulldozers.”

Prior to September 11, 2001, the Cohen Building, like most federal buildings, was open to the public. Currently, the only people passing by the mural throughout the day are federal employees and occasional art tour groups.

A mural on one side of the Cohen Building’s main hallway depicts an elderly woman on crutches inside a collapsing building. Other scenes include a father and son wandering along railroad tracks, a boy limping past a child lying on the road, and men waiting for work.

A mural on the other side depicts men welding beams for new buildings, harvesting crops, and erecting new walls, some of them enrolling in social security. All the murals make up one piece titled “The Meaning of Social Security,” created by Ben Shahn in 1942 and made of egg tempura on dry plaster.

The original entrance to the building has two frescoes painted in wet plaster by Seymour Vogel in 1942. On the right is “National Safety,” which depicts a family relaxing. On the left is “Wealth of Nations,” which shows the economic success needed to bring the country out of the Great Depression.

Both artists specialized in social realist art, focused on the hardships of American life, and participated in several government art programs that employed artists during the Great Depression. They had successful and distinguished careers, with their work exhibited in major American museums.

Shaan is also known for his photography and left-wing politics. Vogel was a pioneer of modern and abstract art.

Vogel and Scharn’s parts are chemically bonded to the building’s walls and cannot be easily removed.

The building also features four sculptures and two oil paintings on canvas. In the facility’s main auditorium, a three-panel work by Philip Guston from 1943 entitled “Reconstruction and Family Happiness” fills the stage. It is the easiest of the large murals to move because it is attached to a wooden panel.

“It’s a beautiful idea that public servants are so dedicated to building a social safety net that they care enough to create some kind of social security palace for working-class people and decorate it with art,” Okin said.

push or pull

During the Biden administration, the General Services Administration determined it would cost at least $500 million to completely modernize the Cohen Building with new electrical systems, windows and insulation, said Jonathan Stern, a former GSA asset manager whose portfolio also included the Cohen Building. He said they also looked at ways to restore the building to a state where it can operate at full capacity for more than 4,000 federal employees and make it essentially energy-neutral.

He said Congress was unlikely to spend that much money if it could be sold to a private company to renovate it. He expects it to sell.

“I don’t know how this building could realistically be used,” Stern said. The study is 95% complete, he said, but has not been made public.

Just before Biden left office, Sen. Joni Ernst (R-Iowa) included a requirement in the water bill that the Cohen building be sold to the General Services Administration if it remains vacant for two years.

Although intended to house the Social Security Administration, World War II had begun by the time the building was completed, and the space was requisitioned by the War Department. Since then, several institutions have lived there.

The building currently houses the U.S. Agency for Global Media and Voice of America, which was in the process of moving last year when most of its employees were furloughed. The administration terminated the lease on the new space, but a judge recently ordered VOA to reinstate all staff. It is unknown where they operate from.

Ernst has focused for years on convincing GSA to sell empty or underutilized federal buildings.

Ernst said in a statement that he put the Cohen building up for sale because so few people work there.

“It speaks volumes that only 2 percent of the people who actually worked and were paid to work at the Wilbur J. Cohen Federal Building actually came to see the mural. Given that fact, the fate of that work of art should be left to the property buyer. But there should be no delay in stripping taxpayers of their dime from this expensive monument of waste,” she said.

Her office added that the mural could be donated to the nearby Smithsonian Institution’s National Museum of American History or the National Gallery of Art.

Congress generally does not mandate the sale of specific government buildings. Instead, the General Services Administration decides which buildings and properties to sell and when.

GSA spokeswoman Marianne Copenhaver said in a statement that GSA complies with the law.

“GSA has actively engaged art conservation experts to evaluate the paintings and develop a plan to protect them should the government move forward with disposition of the Wilbur J. Cohen Building,” Copenhaver said. “We are committed to working with property owners who are responsible for managing any artwork involved in the sale or transfer of their property.”

All New Deal-era artwork paid for by taxpayers belongs to the federal government and cannot be sold. If New Deal art cannot be removed when a government building is sold, GSA retains ownership of the artwork and leases the building’s art subject to historic preservation requirements.

Of the 454 murals in GSA’s art collection, only three are at risk of sale on the early disposal list. They are all located in the Cohen building.

parliamentary support

Rep. Lloyd Doggett, D-Texas, remembers the first time he walked past the Fogel and Shean mural before the pandemic.

“The whole building is really a testament to the relationship between workers and government and the promise of Social Security,” Doggett told USA TODAY. “These murals tell us something about the struggles and issues that led to the creation of Social Security and the benefits it now provides to generations of Americans.”

When he learned the Cohen building was for sale, he organized a mural tour for members of Congress, knowing that many people had never been inside the building before, even though it’s just a few blocks from the Capitol.

Doggett asked the House Appropriations Committee to ensure in the spending bill that the mural would be protected if the building is sold.

He worries that the GSA’s code is too flexible to protect art, or that the Trump administration won’t allow the GSA to abide by it.

“I’m troubled by the fact that we are now in the era of the Trump administration, where the GSA could well be encouraged to spend whatever profits it thinks it can get from the top price for this property rather than preserving this priceless art object,” he said.

He questioned why the government has to sell buildings it already owns in the heart of other federal buildings when it leases office space in private buildings in Washington, Maryland and Virginia.

Other Democrats in Congress are concerned that the decline in GSA art staff means the art collections funded by taxpayers are not being properly managed. Several members asked agency leaders to explain how they were handling the load with so few employees.

On March 11, Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse (D-R.I.) and Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) sent a letter to General Services Administration Secretary Ed Forst requesting information about how the collection is being maintained, especially if federal buildings housing art are up for sale.

“Art collections belong to the American people, and it is imperative that GSA upholds its obligation to preserve and protect these works for future generations,” the letter said.

Several members of Congress recently toured the building with Doggett to experience the art.

And on April 7, one year after she began drawing attention to the potential loss, Ms. Orkin will get a chance to see the mural for herself while traveling to Washington to speak to members of Congress.

April 2026 Social Security Payments. When will I receive my check?

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April Social Security payments will follow the normal schedule, with the first payment due on April 8th.

Social Security benefits (paid primarily to elderly or retired beneficiaries) are typically scheduled to be paid on Wednesdays. Payments are made on the second Wednesday of each month to beneficiaries whose birthday is between the 1st and 10th of the month (April 8th in April), according to the Social Security Administration’s calendar.

Beneficiaries born between the 11th and 20th will receive their payment on the third Wednesday of the month (April 15th). According to the SSA calendar, those born on or after the 20th of the month are paid on the fourth Wednesday of each month (April 22nd). Social Security recipients who began receiving benefits before May 1997 will receive payments on Friday, April 3.

The Social Security payment schedule for April is as follows:

Social Security Payment Schedule for April 2026

The Social Security Administration’s 2026 and 2027 benefit payment calendars are available online. We also have a handy calendar below so you can see your schedule for budgeting purposes.

Social Security retirement benefits for April 2026 will be transferred on SSA’s regular schedule.

  • Wednesday, April 8th: The date of birth is from the 1st to the 10th of the month.
  • Wednesday, April 15th: Birthdays are between the 11th and 20th of every month.
  • Wednesday, April 22nd: Birthdays from the 21st to the 31st of every month.

April 2026 and Remaining SSI Payment Schedule

Supplemental Security Income (SSI) is a program that benefits people with limited or no income or assets, people age 65 or older, and people who are blind or have a qualifying disability. According to the SSA website, children with eligible disabilities are also eligible for SSI.

SSI recipients typically receive payments on the first business day of the month, which in April is Wednesday, April 1st. According to the SSA calendar, SSI payment dates for 2026 are:

  • Wednesday, April 1, 2026 (confirmed in April 2026)
  • Friday, May 1, 2026 (Please check May 2026)
  • Monday, June 1, 2026 (confirmed in June 2026)
  • Wednesday, July 1, 2026 (confirmed in July 2026)
  • Friday, July 31, 2026 (Please check for August 2026)
  • Tuesday, September 1, 2026 (confirmed in September 2026)
  • Thursday, October 1, 2026 (confirmed in October 2026)
  • Friday, October 30, 2026 (confirmed in November 2026)
  • Tuesday, December 1, 2026 (confirmed in December 2026)
  • Thursday, December 31, 2026 (confirmed for January 2027)

This is a calendar showing all Social Security and SSI payments for 2026.

2026 Social Security Payment Schedule

Mike Snyder is a national trends news reporter for USA TODAY. You can follow him on Threads, Bluesky, and X, and email him at: mike snyder & @mikegsnider.bsky.social & @mikesnider & msnider@usatoday.com.

Feifei Li sparked the AI ​​boom – now she won’t let humans lag behind

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As co-founder of World Labs, she just raised $1 billion in funding to expand AI into “spatial intelligence.” She wants to put humans at the center every step of the way

Fei-Fei Li is one of USA TODAY’s 2026 Women of the Year, which recognizes women who have made a significant impact in and outside of their communities. Introducing this year’s winners here.

On February 18th, Feifei Li made headlines. World Labs, the company she co-founded, announced it has raised $1 billion in funding amount B. They are now gearing up to bring artificial intelligence to 3D. This is the “spatial intelligence” that enables robots to wash dishes and sort socks.

Twenty years ago, when she was a young assistant professor fresh off her Ph.D. and working in the field of AI, even Lee couldn’t have imagined that would be possible. At the time, to the general public, the field was synonymous with sci-fi dystopian movies like “The Matrix” and “I, Robot.” In the research community, this technology was seen as promising but largely stalled.

“I entered the AI ​​world in the middle of the AI ​​winter,” she says.

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Inspired by family and the future: Feifei Li talks about using AI for good

Stanford University computer scientist Fei-Fei Li, a USA TODAY Women of the Year, explains why principles should come before profit for AI.

But Lee had a theory. Humans learn visually. We absorb vast amounts of information by looking at the world around us. She believed that AI needed to learn how humans learn. It uses not only algorithms, but also images.

“I knew this was a contrarian idea, but I really felt like this was one piece that was definitely missing,” she says.

Lee’s hypothesis received little attention. She co-authored a small paper and presented it at a conference without much fanfare. However, she published the dataset and challenged it. Think of this as the Olympics for AI. The 2010 ImageNet Large-Scale Visual Recognition Challenge brought together the world’s best teams to teach computers how to “see” what’s in a photo, using the same large number of images and the same rules.

It was intentionally democratic, open, transparent and inclusive. Competitiveness. human. “Science is about openness, discussion and free flow of ideas,” says Lee, 49. “We test, experiment, and discuss each other’s ideas.” ImageNet quickly became one of the driving forces behind AI, providing the field with much-needed data and establishing benchmarks for progress.

AI and cucumbers (yes, cucumbers)

Lee took a sabbatical to work at Google in 2017 and began to understand how transformative AI could be. The size and scope of the tech giant was impressive. “AI has been a personal curiosity throughout my career,” she says. As a lead scientist in AI and machine learning, she worked in sectors ranging from healthcare to agriculture to manufacturing to energy, and quickly saw how AI would change everyone’s lives. “Every business I worked in was going to be or was going to be changed by AI,” she says.

And everyone: She learned about Japanese farmers using Google’s AI technology. “He was helping out on his mother’s cucumber farm, and there was a very tedious step of sorting the cucumbers,” she recalls. “He’s a developer and a programmer. So to empower his mother, he automated that part of the process using Google’s software. I was here in Silicon Valley, working for the biggest company, graduating from one of the best universities in the world. And on the other side of the world, one person can use AI to transform a small business.”

She recognized that such a civilizational influence required some basic rules. “It became a mission for me,” she says. “We need a lighthouse to show us where this technology is going. One company can’t make money. We have to center human dignity, human well-being.”

She stuck to that belief even as Google faced backlash over Project Maven, a controversial deal with the Pentagon to use AI to analyze drone footage in conflict zones. Thousands of employees petitioned the company not to engage in “war business,” and some of Lee’s emails were publicly leaked. She did not resign. In return, she helped create Google’s “AI Principles” for the responsible development of technology. “I stayed because I had a responsibility,” she says. “Every university, every company was grappling with how to establish industry norms, how to establish a culture within each organization to deal with what was coming.”

Once these guidelines were made available to the public, she returned to Stanford with a sense of urgency. If AI is to shape humanity, humanity will need to be at the very center of technological progress. She co-founded the Stanford Human-Centered AI Institute in 2019 to bring together colleagues across disciplines, including computer science, law, medicine, business, and the humanities, to explore, study, and above all guide the impact of AI on humans and society. She uses her expertise to guide public policy. When California Governor Gavin Newsom was pushing for new legislation to put guardrails around AI, he called on Lee.

“Godmother of AI”

According to Harvard University economist Jason Furman, AI will account for 92% of GDP growth by early 2025, and experts believe this is just the beginning of a massive cultural shift driven by machine learning.

Lee often says that who builds AI will influence its future. She reminds her students not to be tied down by labels, gender, roles, or expectations. That’s why she co-founded AI4ALL. AI4ALL has helped thousands of students from underrepresented backgrounds learn AI for free. She recognizes both the opportunities and threats that AI poses. “Technology is always a double-edged sword,” she says. “Human civilization is a history of innovation. From the day we discovered fire, from the day we discovered that we could crush stones to make an axe, to the invention of the wheel, electricity, cars, airplanes, biotechnology, and now AI, every step of the way, we intend to innovate for good, but as a species we always have a dark side that could potentially use it for harm.” That’s why she feels the Stanford Human-Centered AI Institute is so important. “Tackling these really tough problems requires thought leadership, and you need an ecosystem of people working together to solve these toughest problems,” she says.

She believes her research can advance the potential of AI for the better. And there are so many possibilities. “Many of us are benefiting from AI in our daily lives,” she says. “Literally, if you have a sick child, instead of just talking to a doctor or nurse, you can now have a meaningful conversation with an AI about how you can take care of your child.”

Her family is a multigenerational one, with her parents immigrating together from China and living with her husband and two teenagers. Her parents’ long-term illness led her to become interested in AI for healthcare and elderly care. Her dinner table conversations about AI with her children focus on how AI is both a responsibility and a tool: something to learn from, question, and use for good.

When asked what she would like her children to say when they look back on this moment in history, she did not mention the World Institute, the Stanford Institute for Human-Centered AI, her awards, or her more than 400 scientific publications. “I hope they say I was a good mother,” she says.

There is nothing more human than that.

Wendy Nogle He is the executive editor of entertainment for USA Today. Follow her on Instagram @wendy_naugle.

Supreme Court to decide whether Trump can redefine birthright citizenship

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The court’s decision is likely to be handed down just before the country’s 250th anniversary, giving the already blockbuster case even more significance.

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WASHINGTON – Who are the Americans?

This is the fundamental question the Supreme Court will take up on April 1 when it considers President Donald Trump’s ability to severely restrict children born in the United States from automatically becoming citizens.

The court’s decision is likely to be handed down just before the country celebrates its 250th anniversary.th The anniversary adds even more significance to an already blockbuster case.

This is another opportunity for the Supreme Court to consider expanded powers that President Trump has asserted since returning to the White House last year.

Can he change the definition of birthright citizenship with a stroke of the pen? “What the president’s executive order seeks to do is rewrite civil rights as we have known them since the late 19th century.”th said Cesar Cuauhtemoc García Hernández, an immigration law expert at the Ohio State University School of Law.

What does the Constitution say about birthright citizenship?

14th The amendment, ratified in 1868, states that “all persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are nationals of the United States and of the states in which they reside.”

This has long been interpreted to include everyone except diplomats, invading troops, and children born to Native Americans who originally achieved birthright citizenship under a 1924 law.

In a landmark decision in 1898, the Supreme Court upheld the citizenship rights of Wong Kim Ark, a San Francisco-born man. The man’s parents were Chinese, and the law at the time prohibited him from becoming a citizen.

And the immigration law enacted in mid-2020th Almost the same language was used in this century as in the 14th century.th Fixed.

But President Trump said the text had been misread.

He argues that “subject to that jurisdiction” excludes children born to parents who are not citizens. This is because, even though they must obey U.S. laws while abroad, they may feel loyal to a foreign country. The Supreme Court’s 1898 decision applied to children whose parents are “domiciled and domiciled in the United States,” according to the Justice Department.

What are President Trump’s policies?

On his first day in office, President Trump directed federal officials to deny citizenship to infants born in the United States without at least one parent being an American citizen or lawful permanent resident (a “green card” holder).

The executive order, titled “Protecting the Meaning and Values ​​of American Citizenship,” is one of more than 500 policy changes by the administration that longtime immigration law scholar Stephen Yale Lohr said are among the most sweeping immigration restrictions in modern U.S. history.

Yale Roher, a former professor at Cornell Law School, said these policies are “different in scale and quality” than those pushed by President Trump in his first administration.

But while the president has great discretion over who is allowed into the United States, he differs in defining who is a natural-born American.

“Historically, all Supreme Courts have respected presidents on immigration issues because immigration concerns sovereignty and foreign affairs,” he said. “This involves provisions of the Constitution itself.”

Second round at the Supreme Court

The Supreme Court took up President Trump’s birthright citizenship executive order last year, but only decided whether lower courts had gone too far in blocking its enforcement while the order was being challenged.

In a 6-3 decision in June, the court rejected the way the justices had left President Trump’s order on ice while leaving him another path.

And it didn’t take long for the road to be used.

In July, a federal judge in New Hampshire blocked a civil rights order in a class-action lawsuit brought by affected children and their parents.

Judge Joseph LaPlante said the order likely contradicted Article 14.th The amendment and the untouched century-old precedent for interpreting it. ” He also said it could violate federal law that contains similar language.

Who is challenging President Trump’s policies?

The parents representing their children in the lawsuit include a woman from Honduras who has lived in the United States since 2024 and gave birth in the months after Trump signed the executive order.

The woman, known by the pseudonym “Barbara,” said in a court filing that she is seeking asylum from gang activity in Honduras and that her family is part of the local community in New Hampshire.

Another mother who is challenging the order came to the United States from Taiwan on a student visa in 2013 and is applying for a work visa. She and her husband have four children, three of whom were born in the U.S. before Trump’s executive order and one after.

“My husband and I ended up building a life here,” the woman known as “Susan” said in a court filing. “My baby deserves American citizenship and a future.”

“Our Foundation as a Nation”

The American Civil Liberties Union, which represents immigrants, has argued to the Supreme Court that birthright citizenship is “foundational to us as a nation.”

“This case is about the administration’s efforts to redefine what America is,” said Cody Wofsy, an attorney with the ACLU Immigrant Rights Project. “If you go back to the founding of this country, the rule was that if you were born in this country, you were an American.”

The Civil Rights Clause of the 14th Amendment, passed after the Civil War to repudiate the Supreme Court’s infamous 1857 Dred Scott decision that blacks are not citizens of the United States, covers “all persons.”

Under President Trump’s policies, about 255,000 children born on U.S. soil each year would start their lives without U.S. citizenship, according to the Migration Policy Institute.

Supporters of Trump and his executive orders argue that he is trying to protect American citizenship from devaluation.

“This debate is not just about immigration policy. It’s about what it means to be an American citizen,” Sen. Eric Schmidt, R-Missouri, said during a recent Senate hearing on the issue. “When citizenship loses its meaning, the foundations of the republic begin to weaken from within.”

What defines citizenship?

Schmidt said citizenship must be rooted in loyalty to a national community and should not apply to children of people who are in the country as students, tourists or without government permission.

But Alejandro Barranco, a U.S. Marine Corps veteran whose father was violently arrested by immigration officials last year while living in the U.S. without legal status, said it’s proof that belonging to a nation is determined by someone’s contributions, not ancestry.

“I was born here, I grew up here, I served here,” Barranco told the Senate Judiciary Committee. “I love this country and I have shown it through my actions.”

A 2025 Pew Research Center poll found that while there was near unanimous agreement that people born in this country to parents who were born in the United States or to parents who immigrated legally should be citizens, the public was evenly divided on the issue of birthright citizenship for people whose parents were illegal immigrants.

Half of the adults surveyed said these infants should have citizenship, while 49% disagreed.

What decision might the Supreme Court make?

One reason the Supreme Court often agrees to take cases is because lower courts are divided on the issue.

Garcia Hernandez, an immigration law expert at Ohio State University School of Law, said an easier path for the Supreme Court would have been to dismiss the administration’s appeal because none of the justices who reviewed Trump’s policy found it legal.

“But that’s not what they did,” he said. “That suggests there are some justices who are inclined to agree with the president.”

The biggest event of the century?

But the justices may have intended to get a final answer in Trump v. Barbara.

Eric Wessan, an attorney with the Iowa attorney general’s office who joined the legal brief prepared by Republican attorneys general who support Mr. Trump, said the court could take a narrower path.

Rather than determining the original meaning of 14;th He said the proposed amendment would simply allow the justices to say that an executive order cannot overturn the 1952 Immigration and Nationality Act, which uses similar language that was well understood at the time.

“This is what I would call a Chief Justice (John) Roberts special, where he can avoid very difficult constitutional justice decisions and at the same time reaffirm the supremacy of Congress,” Ouessant said in a webinar previewing the debate.

In a submission to the Supreme Court, renowned constitutional law scholar Akil Reed Amal urged the justices not to avoid addressing constitutional issues by focusing solely on immigration and citizenship law. He said the case could be the most important of this century.

“All constitutional questions are important,” Amal wrote, “but few compare to the constitutional question in this case. Who are the Americans? Can the president ignore the Constitution itself? Can the president ignore valid laws of Congress and make himself the dictator of all laws?”

Howie Mandel talks about Kelly Ripa’s age comments

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Howie Mandel is trying to defuse tension between Kelly Ripa and Mark Consuelos after a headline-grabbing exchange over a backdoor compliment.

The “America’s Got Talent” judge and comedian spoke about his previous week’s appearance on “Live with Kelly and Mark” in a March 28 Instagram video. On the March 23 episode, Ripa said it “doesn’t make any sense” that Mandel is 70 years old, and her husband pointed out, “You look so great.”

“I’ve been debating for 48 hours whether or not to post this, but I don’t know if I’m doing the right thing philosophically. I don’t think a comedian should apologize for a joke,” Mandel said at the beginning of the video. “This is a joke. I mean it as a joke and I don’t mean to offend you. You won’t like it.”

“This is hard for me because in 50 years of business, I have never publicly apologized. But this is for Kelly Ripa, who has been incredibly supportive thus far,” he continued. “Not only have I been a guest on her show, I’ve co-hosted with her and I’ve known her for years. When I go on the show, I just try to be funny and funny, but as a comedian, sometimes things don’t go the way you want them to.”

Mandel recently appeared on daytime talk shows in 2024 and 2025. As Mandel continued speaking, his apology sounded like the video was actually making fun of the incident.

“I don’t know how to say it, but I just want to say I’m sorry to Kelly, and this is the hardest part, but you’re right. You’re absolutely right. I’m sorry I didn’t take it that way,” he said. “But after much thought and introspection, I look good for my age. I really do. I look great. I have to accept the fact that I look this good.”

During an appearance on “Live with Kelly and Mark,” Mandel seemed to resent Ripa and Consuelos’ compliments. “Do I look great? It means nothing to me,” Mandel said. “I don’t like it, because it’s a warning, because if you tell someone you’re 70 years old, they’ll say, ‘You look great[for your age].'”

He added: “That’s like saying, ‘Smart for a fool.'” “Oh, you look smart. You look smart.’ It doesn’t look good.”

The hosts insisted that Mandel was “amazing” regardless of his age, a point Mandel eventually conceded.

“Thank you. … Honestly, let’s be serious for a second. I’m gorgeous. I am,” Mandel said, to which Ripa responded, “You are beautiful.”

Contributor: Edward Segarra, USA TODAY

Frontier flight investigated for ‘verbal bomb threat’ at Georgia airport

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The Federal Bureau of Investigation is investigating an alleged false bomb threat made by a Frontier Airlines passenger shortly after the Frontier Airlines flight arrived at Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport on Sunday, March 29th.

Frontier Flight 2539 departed John Glenn Columbus International Airport at 2:38 p.m. and landed at Atlanta Airport at 5:09 p.m., according to FlightAware. A passenger made a “verbal bomb threat” as the Frontier plane was driving toward its designated gate, an airline spokesperson told USA TODAY.

“As a precautionary measure and in coordination with local authorities, the aircraft was parked in a remote location while law enforcement responded,” Frontier News said. The Denver-based airline added that the threat was determined not to be credible and the passengers were deplaned via air stairs and taken to the terminal by bus.

There were no reports of injuries. A spokesperson for Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport said airport operations are normal.

According to the FBI, federal authorities and Atlanta police responded to the incident.

“The FBI can assure the traveling public that there is no continuing threat related to this incident,” the bureau said in a statement. An investigation is currently underway and authorities are conducting interviews. The FBI will consult with the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Northern District of Georgia to determine whether to file federal charges.

USA TODAY has contacted Atlanta police for additional information. The FAA declined to comment, deferring to local law enforcement and airlines.

A man aboard a JetBlue flight that took off from Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport in Broward County, Florida, earlier this month was detained on suspicion of making a bomb threat, local news outlets WSVN and WPLG reported.

Contributor: Julia Gomez, USA TODAY

Border czar Tom Homan says ICE may remain at airports after TSA funding

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White House border czar Tom Homan told CNN that U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents sent across the country to support the Transportation Security Administration amid staffing shortages may remain on the job for a while longer.

TSA employees are expected to receive pay later this week after more than a month without pay due to the partial government shutdown. Homan appeared on CNN’s “State of the Union” on March 29 and said the pressure on the security lines may ease somewhat. He also said whether ICE agents leave airports will depend on how many TSA agents return to work.

“God bless the men and women of ICE as I work closely with the TSA administrator and the ICE director to determine what needs to happen at which airports,” Homan said. “They are plugging those holes and keeping airport security at a high level.”

President Donald Trump sent ICE agents to airports across the U.S. on March 23 to reduce wait times amid a shortage of TSA personnel and a partial government shutdown. Loren Biss, acting assistant secretary for public affairs at the Department of Homeland Security, confirmed late on March 25 that “ICE officers go through a standard TSA training curriculum and then perform entrance/exit security, logistics support, crowd control, and identity verification using TSA equipment and standard operating procedures.”

ICE is “closing security holes,” Homan says.

Although the president has said ICE has made a “huge change,” USA TODAY previously reported that police officers were not seen primarily assisting airline travelers while they waited in long lines at airports. Homan told CNN that lines have decreased in all locations where ICE officers have been sent to “protect exit lanes, perform identification checks, (and) close security holes.”

“ICE officers are not going to look at X-ray images and decide which bags need secondary handling. This is advanced training,” Homan said. “But we can check their ID before they get to that machine, and we can cover the exit so people don’t come in through the exit. This takes the TSA officer out of the security line and puts him on top of the X-ray machine. We’re closing other security holes. We want to keep our airports safe, so we’re doing the job that TSA is asking us to do so that the TSA officer can get back to the main inspection.”

Homan’s comments came two days after President Trump pledged to pay TSA employees and signed an order directing funds toward their salaries. Homeland Security Secretary Mark Wayne Mullin will begin the process of paying TSA employees as soon as President Trump signs the memo, and Homan told CNN on March 29 that TSA employees could be paid “hopefully by tomorrow or Tuesday.”

Still, the larger DHS remains underfunded as Congress continues to struggle to build bipartisan agreement. The House passed a stopgap funding bill for the agency on March 27, with a near party-line vote of 213-203. The bill is already “dysfunctional” without Democratic support, Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) declared earlier in the day. That means the bill’s chances of becoming law are virtually zero because there aren’t enough votes to pass it in the Senate.

Additionally, the planned break means the partial shutdown could last until mid-April, with a two-week parliamentary recess for Easter and Passover beginning on March 27. Both the House and Senate are not scheduled to resume until April 13, except for a temporary session, a short session in which no business is normally conducted.

Contributors: USA TODAY’s Nathan Diller, Zachary Schermele and Jeanine Santucci.

Kate Perez covers national trends and breaking news for USA TODAY. You can reach her at kperez@usatodayco.com or X @katecperez_.

Duke basketball suffers another March Madness collapse. The reason is as follows

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WASHINGTON – Freshman superstar leads Duke University to the ACC Championship.

The Blue Devils crossed the regular season goal line and earned the top seed in the East.

Everything is going according to plan as they gear up for the sixth national championship in program history and are poised to cruise to a double-digit lead against a seasoned opponent.

All of this may sound familiar.

All that momentum and Duke’s postseason hopes vanished last year in the biggest meltdown in Final Four history against Houston. On Sunday, the Blue Devils pulled off one of the most spectacular collapses in Elite Eight history, trailing by double digits in the second half, only to lose to No. 2 Connecticut 73-72 on guard Braylon Mullins’ 35-foot 3-pointer with 0.4 seconds left.

“I couldn’t be more disappointed and thinking about the players, just trying to process what happened and at the same time, I don’t have any words. I have no words,” coach John Scheyer said. “I have no words other than how proud I am of them and how disappointed we are.”

When Duke faced the Cougars in the national semifinals last season, it held a 14-point lead with 8:17 left, led by nine with 2:15 left, led by seven with 1:26 left, and led by six at the 42-second mark.

But Houston outscored the Blue Devils 15-3 in the final two-plus minutes to win 70-67, handing what Scheier called at the time “the most heartbreaking loss.”

That loss comes with competition.

“We have a right to feel the way we feel,” guard Isaiah Evans said. “We worked really hard for this goal, and you’re so hurt right now that we fell so far short of the goal that we did. So what I’m saying is, whatever you’re feeling, you have the right to feel that way.”

Thanks to a blitz-like 14-0 run, Duke led 44-25 with 3:24 left and was on the verge of delivering an early knockout blow to the smaller and seemingly outmatched Huskies. Despite UW’s slight lead, the Blue Devils led 44-29 at halftime.

After Duke center Patrick Gomba II hit an alley-oop three minutes into the second half, the lead increased to 17 points, 50-33. The Huskies pulled within seven points with 9:43 remaining, but Duke ended up trailing by 11 points with eight minutes remaining. Again, the Huskies move within seven points with seven minutes left. On the next possession, a 3-pointer by Nikolas Khamenia put Duke back up to double digits.

Then the collapse happened. Evans made two free throws and Duke led 67-58 with five minutes left. University responded with a 7-0 run with a solo ball by the guard for an and-one, making it 67-64 with 3:42 left.

After a Cameron Boozer turnover with 65 seconds left, college forward Alex Karavan made a 3-pointer to make it 70-69. Cameron Boozer answered with a short jumper. With 10 seconds left, University guard Cyrus Demaree Jr. made one of two free throws to make it 72-70, setting up one of the most dramatic finishes in tournament history and one of the lowest scores in Duke University history.

Dame Sir received the ball under the Huskies’ basket and dove to Cameron Boozer, who was briefly trapped by two college defenders. Cameron Boozer bounced a pass to Sarr with 9.2 seconds left, and Sarr passed to point guard Kayden Boozer with 7.5 seconds left.

Kayden Boozer, who entered Sunday second on the team in free throw percentage with 79.7 percent, made all six of his attempts from the line against the Huskies. But instead of pushing the ball and waiting for the inevitable foul from two college defenders, he tried to pass forward to an open teammate.

“Kayden is one of our best free throw shooters, so I just passed him the ball,” Sarr said. “I feel like it doesn’t matter what happens after that. We’re a team, we go down together, we win together. We lost together today, and that’s it.”

The pass was tipped by Demarie and recovered by Mullins on Duke’s side of the half-court line. Mullins stepped forward to Karavan, received the ball right behind him, and then fired the ball around. -ess March Madness logo.

Swish. Ball game.

“We turned the ball over,” Kayden Boozer said. “I ruined my team’s season. That’s all I can do.”

There are various factors behind meltdowns. The Huskies picked up the bonus with six minutes left, slowing the pace of the game and disrupting Duke’s flow. The Blue Devils didn’t give up from the beginning of the second half. They quickly brought their belongings home.

A year after that memorable mistake, the Blue Devils failed to digest that painful lesson and made the same critical, game-changing mistake.

“I think we fought hard,” freshman forward Cameron Boozer said. He finished off a great season with a game-high 27 points, eight rebounds, and four assists the rest of the way.

“We gave a lot, but overall I think we could have given more in the second half. We came out a little flat and gave them a little bit of life. That’s really all they need when you play a good team like UW.”

This is clear. Duke University is a superstar program with superstar players and superstar coaches. But something is clearly wrong with the Blue Devils.

The reason for the back-to-back tournament failures lies in the program’s approach to roster management compared to the majority of teams that compete for national championships each year. While other teams rely heavily on transfers, Shire and Duke continue to rely on traditional high school recruiting to land one-and-done marquees like Cameron Boozer and Cooper Flagg.

“For me, it turns out that coaching freshmen and young players is everything I’ve ever known,” Scheyer said Saturday.

Thanks to the overwhelming performance of the freshmen, the Blue Devils have only lost seven games over the past two seasons. However, all of these losses can be attributed to youth and inexperience in some way. Duke has held double-digit leads in all three of its losses this season, but last year’s single-digit losses to Kentucky, Kansas, Clemson and Houston all came after late turnovers by Flagg and fellow freshman Con Knuppel.

And each season, Duke made it to the final stages of the tournament with a roster made up mostly of freshmen before teetering on veteran-led stability. No, UConn doesn’t have the star power of the Blue Devils. But the Huskies had been here before, and that was the difference.

From that perspective, Duke lost not because of a missed pass with seconds left, or a miraculous heave, or because the Blue Devils lacked the killer instinct to permanently beat the Huskies in the second half.

The root cause lies deeper. Duke is a young powerhouse that can overwhelm any opponent on its regular-season schedule, but that same lack of experience becomes its Achilles’ heel against an opponent that knows what it takes to win in March and April.

“There’s no one in this room, myself included, who doesn’t replicate everything that they can do and how they can help,” Scheyer said.

“Of course, that’s part of being in this seat. That’s part of being in this place. At the end of the day, we have to finish it. We reflect. We learn and we do it all. But yeah, of course.”

President Donald Trump OKs Russian oil tanker resupply to Cuba

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President Donald Trump called Cuba a “chaos” and “failed country” but said people there needed help because of power outages.

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WASHINGTON – President Donald Trump confirmed on March 29 his intention to allow Russian tankers to supply Cuba despite the blockade against the country.

The United States has blocked shipments from Venezuela, which supported Cuba before ousting former leader Nicolas Maduro. Reuters reported, citing the Cuban news site Cubadebate, that ship tracking data showed the sanctioned Russian-flagged tanker Anatoly Kolodkin was just off the eastern tip of Cuba and was due to arrive at the port of Matanzas on March 30.

“I told them that if a country wants to send oil to Cuba right now, I don’t care if it’s Russia or not,” President Trump told reporters aboard Air Force One on March 29. “It doesn’t matter if they get a ship with oil in it. Whether it’s Russia or any country, I want the oil to come in because the people need heating and cooling and everything else.”

The oil will come as a relief to Cuba, which has not received any oil imports in three months, according to President Miguel Diaz-Canel. Oil shortages have led to tight gasoline rationing, worsening the energy crisis and causing power outages across Cuba.

The New York Times reported on March 29, citing unnamed U.S. officials, that the Coast Guard had allowed a Russian sanctions tanker loaded with crude oil to arrive in Cuba.

President Trump reiterated his vow that Cuba would be next, but critics fear that could mean military action against Cuba after the military removal of Venezuela’s leader and the US and Israel’s war against Iran. Trump said “next” could mean helping to free them, or it could mean “taking them.”

President Trump said, “Cuba is in chaos.” “This is a failing country. It’s going to fail eventually. We’re there to help it.”

President Trump and Secretary of State Marco Rubio, whose parents are Cuban immigrants, have said the country’s prosperity requires overhauling or replacing the communist government.

“If other countries want it, I don’t really care. It doesn’t affect me. Cuba is finished. They have a bad government. Their leadership is very bad and corrupt.”

UN releases climate change report as El Niño danger increases

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Long-term warming trends will counter short-term global warming, potentially resulting in unprecedented heat in 2027.

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March’s unusual heat wave has already pushed temperatures to summer levels in many parts of the western and central United States, but a new report comes with a dire warning: “This is just the beginning.”

The World Meteorological Organization (WMO) announced on March 23 that the Earth’s climate is now “the most out of balance in recorded history.”

This long-term warming trend could be met with short-term global warming, resulting in unprecedented heat in 2027.

Short-term impacts for meteorologists include a potentially strong El Niño predicted to begin this fall, which could set further global heat records.

El Niño is a natural warming of Pacific waters that affects weather around the world and often leads to the hottest years on record, including the record-breaking global average temperature in 2024.

If El Niño progresses as expected, Earth will likely experience the warmest year on record, climate scientist Sieg Hausfather told the X program in early March.

The news comes as the WMO reports dire climate change data, and “the global climate situation is in a state of emergency,” UN Secretary-General António Guterres said in a statement. “Earth is tipping over the edge. All major climate indicators are flashing red.”

US heatwave is the worst on record

According to the Associated Press, a recent analysis by World Weather Attribution found that fossil fuel-driven warming has increased observed temperatures by several degrees, making the March heat wave in the United States “virtually impossible without anthropogenic climate change.”

The heat is raising concerns about drought and lack of snow across the West, and the heat is increasing the likelihood of wildfires in many parts of the country this spring, summer and fall.

In Flagstaff, Arizona, for example, “this event was the most extreme heat event we’ve seen all year,” said Daniel Swain, a climate scientist at the University of California’s College of Agriculture and Natural Resources.

Regarding the overall heat, he said, “This was probably one of the most unusual heat events (in an extreme sense) ever observed in North America in modern history.”

“This doesn’t mean this month has been hotter than during the July heat wave,” Swain said. “But what this means is that the deviation of temperatures from normal temperatures during this period was significantly larger than in any previously observed event,” he added.

All told, at least 14 states may have set new records for March temperatures.

Concern about climate change increases: “Energy is being stored”

The WMO, the UN’s meteorological agency, said concentrations of greenhouse gases from fossil fuel combustion continue to cause the atmosphere and oceans to warm and ice to melt.

These “rapid and large-scale changes occurred within a few decades, but will have deleterious effects for hundreds and even millennia to come,” the Japan Meteorological Agency said.

According to the WMO, the Earth gains far more heat energy than it releases due to emissions of greenhouse gases such as carbon dioxide and methane.

This record “energy imbalance” heated the oceans to new heights last year and continued to melt the Earth’s ice sheets, the BBC said.

WMO science officer John Kennedy explained that in a balanced system, the amount of energy coming in from the sun is approximately equal to the amount of energy going out, but this is not currently the case.

“Rising greenhouse gas concentrations are reducing energy outflows,” he said in a statement. “More energy coming in than going out means energy is being stored in Earth’s systems.”

Data shows that levels of three major greenhouse gases – carbon dioxide, methane and nitrous oxide – will continue to increase in 2025.

In 2024 (the last year for which we have integrated global observations), atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations reached their highest levels in 2 million years, and methane and nitrous oxide reached their highest levels in at least 800,000 years.

Contributor: Dinah Voyles Pulver, USA TODAY

Doyle Rice is a national correspondent for USA TODAY, focusing on weather and climate.

Robert De Niro supports No Kings protests, slams President Trump as ‘stupid’

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Robert De Niro has raised the bar in his criticism of President Donald Trump as No Kings protests sweep across the United States.

Speaking with the Rev. Al Sharpton, with whom he traveled to a No Kings Day event in New York in the early morning hours of March 28, the 82-year-old actor told MS Now that the massive turnout gave him hope that the midterm elections would not favor the president and his Republican allies.

De Niro said: “Our democracy is in danger, and this idiot is in danger just like all the idiots around him. It’s like an unrealistic dream and it’s crazy.” “We can’t relax until the midterm elections are resolved and rightfully resolved. We can’t let this guy go.”

He accused President Trump of trying to “detract” from the Epstein files, adding: “If I know anything, I know this guy is going to try anything because he’s crazy. He’s not in good health. He’s a damaged man, well. He’s got to stand up.”

The Oscar-winning actor revealed that he feels “good now” after his third No Kings demonstration, saying: “I don’t want to say the word ‘hope’ again that things will get better and stronger, but that’s the only way we get out of this.”

“My country is in danger. I’m not going to be silent. Why should I be?” he told Sharpton. “Why shouldn’t I say anything, especially when I know I’m right?”

Organizers estimate that up to 8 million people attended 3,300 events held across the United States on Saturday, March 28, but that total has not yet been independently verified. This number exceeds the 7 million people who took part in the October protests and the 5 million who turned out for the first protest on June 24. The loosely organized group, united in its opposition to President Trump, cites several issues, including immigration enforcement, health care access, environmental protection, gun control and war spending.

When asked for comment, White House press secretary Abigail Jackson said, “The only people who care about Trump’s confusion therapy sessions are the reporters who are paid to cover them.”

De Niro was among a number of celebrities who spoke out at the protests, including Jane Fonda, Bruce Springsteen, Joan Baez and “M*A*S*H” star Mike Farrell.

“When the crowd is screaming ‘No Kings,’ what I hear is, as we all know, ‘No Trump,'” De Niro said from the stage at a press conference for the No Kings event in New York City.

“There have been other presidents who have occasionally tested the limits of their constitutional powers, but none have posed such an existential threat to our freedoms and security,” he continued. “Nobody but Trump. He has to be stopped and he has to stop now.”

De Niro called for “no needless wars that take away our resources, sacrifice our great servicemen and women, and slaughter innocent people,” and vowed to “take us from the streets to the polls.”

The war between the United States and Israel on Iran, which began on February 28, is now in its fifth week. In a March 28 post on X, US Central Command announced that 3,500 soldiers and the amphibious assault ship Tripoli had arrived in the Middle East. The contingent includes sailors, Marines and attack fighters.

According to the Pentagon, more than 300 U.S. military personnel have been injured in the Iran war. The death toll remains at 13 military personnel.

The United States has presented Iran with a 15-point ceasefire plan that includes reopening waterways and limiting Iran’s nuclear program. However, the Iranian government rejected this list and submitted its own proposal.

Contributor: Susan Page and Kathryn Palmer, USA TODAY

“No Kings” rallies draw crowds holding unique signs. Please see the photos.

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On March 28, “No Kings” protests swept across the United States, with millions of people demonstrating their opposition to President Donald Trump and his administration.

The more than 3,000 protests included colorful costumes, sharp chants and countless signs featuring topics ranging from the Epstein file to Immigration and Customs Enforcement and calls for President Trump’s impeachment.

The flagship rally in St. Paul, Minnesota, featured notable attendees including Governor Tim Walz, Sen. Bernie Sanders, actress Jane Fonda, and Rep. Ilhan Omar, as well as a performance of Grammy Award-winning singer-songwriter Bruce Springsteen’s “Streets of Minneapolis.”

The protests were the first large-scale demonstrations since the start of the US-Israel war against Iran. Although war was not a central theme of the protests, they drew criticism from left-wing commentators on social media.

Organizers say 8 million people took part in the third round of protests, but that number has not yet been independently verified.

This is a sign from the March 28th “No Kings” rally.

See the “No Kings” rally sign

Protest signs range from humorous to direct. A colorful sign read “NO KINGS, YAS QUEENS!” “He’s gone too far,” one protester in Nashville, Tennessee, said at another in Reno, Nevada.

See some above.

Contributors: Sarah D. Wire, Jeanine Santucci, Jonathan Limehouse, Eduardo Cuevas, USA TODAY

Peter Alexander leaves ‘Today’ show, shares news in emotional segment

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Peter Alexander gets approval.

The 49-year-old NBC News chief White House correspondent and co-host of Saturday’s “Today” show is leaving the network after 22 years.

Alexander shared the news in an emotional segment on “Today” on Saturday, March 28th. He said he made the decision to spend more time with his family, noting that he lives in Washington, D.C., a “trek” from the “Today” show studios in New York City.

“I’ve been away from home more than 80 nights in the last seven months, and I’ve been away from my family more than 220 Friday nights in the last seven years,” Alexander said. “So, in this limited time, I would like to create a better balance between my personal and professional life and try something new before my daughters lose interest in playing with me.”

He continued, “I’m excited. Just like I was taught, my family comes first and the rest is the details.”

Alexander joined NBC News in 2004 and was selected to anchor the Saturday edition of the “Today” show in 2018.

As a White House correspondent for NBC News, Alexander has covered the presidencies of Barack Obama, Joe Biden and Donald Trump. At a White House press conference in March 2020, Trump called Alexander a “terrible reporter” after a reporter asked whether the president was giving Americans a “false sense of hope” by trying to “put a positive spin on things” during the coronavirus pandemic.

In the March 28 segment announcing the news, Alexander’s Today colleagues became emotional over his resignation. Anchor Laura Jarrett praised Alexander as an “excellent journalist,” “a good, decent human being” and “an extraordinary father,” and said she supported his decision to prioritize his family. “You only get one chance to be a father to Eva and Emma,” she says.

Alexander also said he spoke about his decision with Savannah Guthrie, who recently announced she would return to “Today” on April 6 after a two-month absence due to the disappearance of her 84-year-old mother, Nancy Guthrie.

“I also had the opportunity to exchange messages with my dear friend Savannah. I’m excited to have her back here. We will continue to pray for her,” he said.

Alexander is the latest TV anchor to announce major changes to his on-air duties, citing a desire to spend more time with his children. Anderson Cooper announced in February that he was leaving CBS News’ “60 Minutes,” where he was a correspondent in addition to his work at CNN.

“For nearly 20 years, I’ve been juggling my jobs at CNN and CBS, but now that I have young children, I want to spend as much time as possible with them while they still want to spend time with me,” Cooper said.

Cory Booker slams Democrats for “meeting with press” negotiations for 2028 presidential election

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Sen. Cory Booker said in a new interview that Democrats have “failed at this point” and appealed to the left to support new leadership to ease the nation’s deep divisions.

Appearing on NBC News’ “Meet the Press” on Sunday, March 29, the New Jersey Democratic congressman promoted his new book, “The Stand,” in which he writes that the Democratic Party has stumbled on administering “purity tests” to its members. Mr Booker argued that these formed a coalition “too small to effect major change”.

“I’m proud of a lot of the things my Democratic colleagues are doing, but collectively, our party is failing at this point,” Booker said.

Expanding on that passage from his book, the congressman told host Kristen Welker that Democrats must make a “generational shift” to bridge the bitter partisan divide.

“This is one of our greatest crises, and it’s time to envision a new vision for this country that is far more united, brings people together, and is less divided,” Booker said. “I truly believe that this is a time when we need new leadership, a new moral imagination, to unite our country.”

Booker added that the Democratic challenge is bigger than President Donald Trump and his administration, something the party and Booker passionately oppose. Last year, Booker protested the president on the Senate floor, delivering a 25-hour marathon speech airing Democrats’ dissatisfaction with the administration’s policies.

“He shouldn’t be the hero of our story at this point,” Booker said in an interview. “We have real challenges with new technologies such as AI and robotics, and we have new challenges that require greater national unity. And they remind us that we are not each other’s enemies. In fact, our ability to fund common ground has always been our greatest hope.”

Democrats did not rule out running for president in 2028 when asked directly. He ran unsuccessfully for the party’s nomination in 2020.

“I’m running for re-election,” Booker said. “I hope the state of New Jersey supports me for another six years.”

Kathryn Palmer is USA TODAY’s political reporter. She can be reached at the following address: kapalmer@usatoday.com And to X@Kathryn Purml. Sign up for her daily politics newsletter here.

Caster Semenya criticizes IOC and Kirsty Coventry over transgender ban

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Olympic champion runner Caster Semenya on Sunday expressed disappointment with the International Olympic Committee and criticized IOC President Kirsty Coventry following the IOC’s recent decision to ban transgender athletes from competing in the Olympics.

The decision also limits female athletes like Semenya who have differences in sexual development, or medical conditions known as disorders of sexual development.

South Africa’s Semenya said she expected more from Zimbabwean Coventry after the women’s race, which was encouraged to celebrate female strength, unity and community support.

“Personally, I think she understands that as a leader she is African and we Africans are from the Global South and we cannot control our genes,” Semenya said at a March 29 press conference in Cape Town.

The IOC issued the ban on March 26, reversing a 2004 decision to allow transgender female athletes to participate.

To date, only one openly transgender woman has competed in the Olympics, a weightlifter from New Zealand, but she failed to make it past the opening round at the 2021 Tokyo Summer Games.

“When the science is clear, show us who made the decision. Don’t pretend it’s a lie, because it’s a lie and we know it because we saw it,” Semenya said. “So if we’re going to answer or confront Kirsty, that’s how we’re going to respond. And this is something that affects women, so we’re going to respond with raw strength.”

Semenya is a two-time Olympic gold medalist in the 800-meter race. Although she was assigned female at birth, she has testosterone levels higher than the typical female range. She has been banned from competing in major international competitions because she refused to take drugs that artificially lower her testosterone levels.

The new eligibility rules, which the IOC says will “protect the fairness, safety and integrity of the women’s category,” will begin at the Los Angeles Olympics in July 2028.

Nevada desert land near Burning Man heads for auction in April

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More than 600 acres of land near Burning Man in the Black Rock Desert will be auctioned off in April.

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A large parcel encompassing hundreds of acres near the Burning Man venue is on the market.

Three parcels totaling more than 615 acres on the edge of the Black Rock Desert will be auctioned in April through online marketplace Concierge Auctions.

This collection of properties is said to be one of the last privately owned parcels near the annual location of Burning Man, and auction officials have called it “one of the most important privately owned properties” in Gerlach, Nevada for some time.

“This is one of the most attractive properties to emerge in northern Nevada in recent decades,” said Carl DiGennaro of Key Realty Las Vegas. “With its geothermal features and significant water rights, as well as its rich history and proximity to Burning Man, it offers exceptional scale and flexibility.”

The three parcels, which are said to have potential for geothermal development, can be acquired individually or as part of a package. The parcel is:

  • Camp David: The 144-acre property is located in one of the “most geothermally active” locations in Nevada, according to the listing.
  • Sandy J: 70 acres surrounded by 2 natural hot springs.
  • fredsfield: The largest parcel is located in the valley adjacent to Black Rock Preserve and is nearly 400 acres in size.

These properties are touted not only for the large water rights they hold, but also for a variety of potential uses.

Camp David is home to the Great Boiling Spring and dozens of natural hot spring pools that hold 201 acre-feet of water. It also features several structures, including primary residences, shops, storage facilities, maintenance outbuildings, and a dedicated power storage facility.

Located just one mile from downtown Gerlach, Sandy J holds just under 145 acre-feet of deeded water rights. City water also flows beneath the property, and the parcel is being touted as an opportunity for “thoughtful development.”

Fred’s Field has 447 acre-feet of spring water and offers outdoor activities such as fishing, paddleboarding, and kayaking. The landscape includes views of mountains such as Granite Peak.

Bidding will open on April 1st at 6:30pm and close on April 15th at 4pm. Interested parties can register through the auction listing page on the Concierge Auctions website. The parcel package is listed for $20 million, and the starting price is expected to be more than $10 million.

“These properties represent years of careful management of the land,” seller David Hardy Jamieson said in a statement. “Each parcel has its own character and significance, and we look forward to watching the next owner shape a vision that honors both the landscape and its incredible potential.”