Trump signs order to 'make America's showers great again'
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The Washington Post |
President Donald Trump signed an executive order Wednesday lifting restrictions on how much water can be used by shower heads, saying his administration would “make America’s showers great again.”
U.S. News & World Report |
An executive order he signed Wednesday calls for an immediate end to water conservation standards that restrict the number of gallons per minute that flow through showerheads and other appliances suc...
Yahoo |
“The pause on reciprocal tariffs announced by President Trump is a welcome reprieve for the global economy,” Carney said in a post on the social platform X.
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F. Scott Fitzgerald’s novel, published 100 years ago this week, was not popular in the author’s lifetime. But it has come to embody American aspiration.
Major market sell-offs typically occur about once every five to 10 years, according to a study, but they come at various times for various reasons.
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Latin Times on MSNTrump's 'Great Time to Buy' Claim Hours Before Tariff Pause Raises Insider Trading ConcernsPresident Donald Trump's post claiming it is a "great time to buy" hours before announcing a tariff pause has sparked concerns of possible insider trading.
F. Scott Fitzgerald’s classic novel is a slender epic of wealth and society, brilliantly depicting the ambitions and illusions of a mysterious self-made man.
Cheeseheads and cheesecakes join the punchlines and headlines, and an enthusiastic audience gets a mild scolding for slipping past the censors. Temporarily.
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The fractured sense of time that F. Scott Fitzgerald creates challenges literary convention. It also reflects a world in flux after the first world war.
In the early days of the Great Depression, Rep. Willis Hawley, a Republican from Oregon, and Utah Republican Sen. Reed Smoot thought they had landed on a way to protect American farmers and manufacturers from foreign competition: tariffs.
“When you’re creating more than a quarter of a million jobs, that’s a great, great tailwind to have as you head into something as unknown as what the president is trying to do to remake the global system.
David Valdes attempts to dramatize that dynamic in “The Great Reveal,” now premiering at Lyric Stage Company of Boston, codirected by Bridget Kathleen O’Leary and Charlotte Snow.
F. Scott Fitzgerald's classic has had a lasting cultural impact on Long Island, from its historical inspirations to its modern-day relevance and adaptations.