Author: Curated by: NewYorkGazette.com Est. 1725

To borrow from the “Meet the Press” tagline, if it’s a Monday in June, it’s another Primary Eve.Tonight, we’ll focus on the national implications of Senate runoff elections tomorrow in Georgia and Alabama. (And here’s what else is on the ballot tomorrow.)Alabama will offer a new test of Trump’s influence …Last month, President Trump repeatedly flexed his power in Republican primaries.But, as we wrote on Friday, June has so far been a rougher month for the president. And even in staunchly pro-Trump Alabama, voters in tomorrow’s Republican Senate primary runoff are wrestling with how to weigh a Trump endorsement against…

Read More

The global financial architecture needs a deeper reset; it should build a country’s capacity to withstand shocks and grow over time. Credit: ShutterstockOpinion by External SourceMonday, June 15, 2026Inter Press Service When G7 leaders arrive in Evian-les-Bains this month, France will host more than another summit. It will host a test of whether rich-country coordination can still solve problems that no country can manage alone. Aid budgets are shrinking, debt-service bills are crowding out investment, climate shocks are damaging infrastructure, and private capital remains scarce and expensive where it is needed most. France has rightly made reducing global imbalances a…

Read More

A growing body of research shows that menopausal hormone therapy can do more than help women manage bothersome symptoms like hot flashes and night sweats. A new study finds that it can be a major tool in preventing osteoporosis, a disease where the bones lose density, becoming more brittle and fragile.[1]The research found that women taking hormone therapy were nearly 70 percent less likely to have signs of osteoporosis or its precursor, osteopenia, compared with those not using it.Researchers say that women need to know about this added benefit when considering hormone therapy.“The conversation around menopausal hormone therapy has historically…

Read More

The catch is whether they can match the efficiency of conventional AC. “One of the key questions that remain is why are the solid-state coolers not as efficient as typical thermodynamic cycles?” says Pramod Reddy, a professor of mechanical engineering at the University of Michigan who studies heat transfer.  Research and pilot programs are underway to test a range of approaches. Brooklyn-based Mimic Systems uses thermo­electric cooling, which passes a current through semiconductive materials to shift heat from one side to another. Its room-scale climate control system is being piloted in an apartment in Vancouver. The German company Magnotherm is…

Read More

The Supreme Court on Monday declined to take up Carter Page’s case against former FBI officials who oversaw what the government now concedes was an ill-advised attempt to surveil his activities during the 2016 campaign. The justices rejected the case without comment. Mr. Page had said the FBI fabricated information to obtain four warrants obtained against him under the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, then leaked information to the press.  His lawsuit targeted former FBI Director James Comey, former employees Peter Strzok and Lisa Page, and others. A lower court had barred the case from moving forward, saying the statute of…

Read More

News of a potential reopening of the strait of Hormuz, through which a fifth of the world’s oil and liquid gas pass, sent stock markets higher and oil prices lower on Monday morning. Iran had closed the waterway to most shipping in the early days of the war mounted against it by the US and Israel.The secretariat of Iran’s supreme national security council said war and military operations on all fronts, including Lebanon, would end permanently from Monday night. The precise terms of the peace deal remain unclear and Julian Borger writes that in reopening the strait, on a basis…

Read More

A cruise ship passenger who was exposed to hantavirus in early May is still being held at a quarantine facility in Nebraska, against her wishes and against the recommendation of a medical review from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.On Monday, Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., a staunch proponent of medical freedom, signed an order to continue quarantining Angela Perryman, 47, even though others who had been held at the facility have, since May 31, been allowed to return to their homes if they wished to do so.In a telephone interview with The New York Times, Ms. Perryman,…

Read More

World leaders on Monday cautiously welcomed a new cease-fire deal and diplomatic path to ending the U.S. war with Iran, as oil prices tumbled, fighting in Lebanon appeared to ease and Iranians expressed wary relief that a conflict that has killed thousands could soon end.No text of the agreement was published by either side, and American and Iranian officials have made conflicting statements about what it contains. But it was clear that its initial phase aimed to end military attacks and allow ships to once again sail freely through the Strait of Hormuz, a vital conduit for the world’s energy…

Read More