WASHINGTON – Vice Adm. Shoshana Chatfield, a leading U.S. Navy officer and former president of the Naval War College, was dismissed from her role as the U.S.

There a stink rising over the United Kingdom’s second-largest city. Garbage has piled up for a month in Birmingham during a dispute between the city and its trash collectors. It is a sore sight for eyes and offensive to the nose. Mountains of garbage are said to be visible from space and people have complained of seeing rats as big as cats in the refuse. “You can see the juice flowing out of the bags onto the road. It stinks,” Naeem Yousef said. “It’s bringing down the areas. People are saying, ‘Look at these areas, how dirty these people are.’” Talks on Monday failed to reach an agreement, but they were scheduled to resume Tuesday as the strike enters its fifth week.


In a dramatic turn of events, President Donald Trump revealed today that the United States would begin high-level, direct negotiations with Iran regarding its nuclear program. The announcement came during his Oval Office meeting with Israeli Prime Minister Bibi Netanyahu.
“We’re having direct talks with Iran, and they’ve started,” Trump said to the press on Monday, following a meeting that was initially expected to center on Israel’s request for relief from new U.S. trade tariffs.
“Maybe a deal’s going to be made, that would be great. We are meeting very importantly on Saturday, at almost the highest level,” he added, surprising many with the timing and nature of the disclosure.

Israel officially acknowledged that it had received a proposal from Egypt aimed at brokering a compromise for a potential hostage release agreement. However, an Israeli official clarified that the country would not accept the terms, citing Egypt’s condition that Israel agree to a permanent ceasefire and withdraw all IDF troops from the Gaza Strip.
According to a report in the Saudi outlet Asharq Al-Awsat, an Egyptian official said the proposal had been shown to Hamas leaders. It outlined a plan under which roughly eight Israeli hostages would be freed in return for a ceasefire that would span anywhere from 40 to 70 days.

As Pesach approaches, thousands of families in Eretz Yisrael are struggling to afford even the most basic necessities for Yom Tov. Kupat HaMarkazit, under the leadership of HaGaon HaRav Ezriel Auerbach, shlit”a, is their lifeline—ensuring they have food on their tables and dignity in their homes. This is our opportunity to fulfill the time-honored tradition of Kimcha D’Pischa—giving to those in need so that they, too, can celebrate Pesach with joy. Now is the time to act. Open your heart. Give generously. Your tzedakah will ensure no Yiddishe home goes without matzah, wine, and the essentials for Pesach. May all who are mishtatef in this heilige mitzvah be zocheh to shefa bracha v’hatzlacha and to be mekabel the Yom Tov b’simcha u’b’tuv leiv!

In a poignant tribute to one of the youngest victims of the October 7 Hamas-led massacre, the Academy of the Hebrew Language has officially renamed a species of butterfly in honor of four-year-old Ariel Bibas. The butterfly, previously known in Hebrew as Kitmit Yerushalayim (Orange Yerushalayim), will now be called Kitmit Ariel (Orange Ariel), commemorating the child who, along with his mother and baby brother, was murdered after being taken hostage. The Academy announced the name change on Friday, noting that the new designation carries deep symbolic meaning. The name “Ariel” is one of the 70 poetic names for Yerushalayim, thus maintaining a connection to the original name while creating a lasting memorial.

In a high-stakes Oval Office meeting on Monday that spanned diplomacy, defense, and economic reform, Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu and President Donald Trump announced a sweeping commitment to deepen U.S.-Israel ties—starting with trade and extending into negotiations with Iran, the Gaza war, and the broader Middle East. Netanyahu began with a bold pledge: Israel will eliminate all trade barriers with the United States, a move he said would also “eliminate the trade deficit.” “Israel can serve as a model for other countries that strive to do the same,” Netanyahu said, expressing support for Trump’s broader tariff policies.

After a meeting with former President Donald Trump, Israeli Prime Minister Bibi Netanyahu spoke to journalists and revealed that Israel had been actively pursuing a new agreement involving a hostage release and a ceasefire in Gaza. He expressed hope that the negotiations would prove successful.
Netanyahu reiterated Israel’s dual objectives: securing the freedom of all remaining hostages and removing Hamas from power in Gaza. “We’re working now on another deal that we hope will succeed, and we’re committed to getting all the hostages out,” Netanyahu stated during his remarks in the Oval Office.
He acknowledged the suffering endured by those still in captivity, saying, “The hostages are in agony, and we want to get them all out.”

Bochurim, young couples, and families across the U.S. are scrambling to find flights back to Eretz Yisroel following Pesach—and many are finding themselves stuck. With El Al flights virtually booked solid on all the prime travel dates, travelers are facing mounting difficulty in securing affordable and direct options to return to yeshiva and their homes. YWN has received multiple reports of travelers resorting to creative—and often complicated—workarounds, including multi-stop itineraries through various European and Middle Eastern countries. Alarmingly, some of these itineraries pass through destinations known to be less than friendly to Jewish passengers, posing potential concerns for safety and comfort, particularly for visibly frum travelers.

Health care systems can reduce suicides through patient screening, safety planning and mental health counseling, a new study suggests, an important finding as the U.S. confronts it 11th leading cause of death. The “Zero Suicide Model” was developed in 2001 at Detroit-based Henry Ford Health, where the focus on people considering suicide included collaborating with patients to reduce their access to lethal means such as firearms and then following up with treatment. The approach made a difference, and for all of 2009, the health system saw no suicides among patients. The researchers then studied what happened when a different health system, Kaiser Permanente, adopted the program in four locations from 2012 through 2019.

During their meeting this afternoon at the Oval Office, Israeli Prime Minister Bibi Netanyahu once again expressed strong support for former U.S. President Donald Trump’s proposed initiative to relocate Gazans during the rebuilding phase of the territory.
Netanyahu emphasized that civilians in Gaza were being “locked” inside the war-torn enclave and prevented from leaving, even as violence continued to rage. “We didn’t lock them in,” he said.
“We are not holding them in,” he reiterated, stressing that Israel was not the party restricting the movement of Gazan civilians.
He drew comparisons to other war-torn regions, such as Ukraine and Syria, where populations were able to escape the fighting and seek refuge elsewhere.

NEW YORK – A new LendingTree study has found that Manhattan drivers rack up more driving incidents than anywhere else in New York City, averaging 7.8 per 1,000 drivers.

New York State Assemblyman Simcha Eichenstein introduced legislation at the State Legislature that would amend a discriminatory NYC Department of Sanitation regulation that unfairly penalizes New York City’s Jewish community. Last year, the NYC Department of Sanitation enacted a rule requiring residents to place their trash on the curb after 8:00 PM in an effort to combat the city’s rat problem. However, this rigid policy ignores the needs of religious New Yorkers who are prohibited from handling trash on Shabbos. As a result, many residents have been subjected to steep fines of $50-$300 simply for observing their faith. “This policy is unacceptable and must come to end,” declared Assemblyman Simcha Eichenstein.

Louisiana State Representative Michael Bayham spent Monday in the Binyamin region as part of his trip to Israel, highlighting the strengthening bond between the Binyamin Regional Council and American officials. This visit comes as a result of the relationships fostered by Yisrael Ganz, Governor of the Binyamin Regional Council, with U.S. political figures.

Millions of shekels will be distributed by Kupat Ha’ir on Erev Pesach this year, bez”H. Millions of shekels will arrive in different ways to needy families throughout Eretz Yisrael. Millions of shekels that you – you!! – gave, that you participated in; and the money that you gave to tzedakah will be yours forever. These merits can never be taken away from you. Do you know what it means to distribute tens of millions of shekels? Part of them are given as food vouchers. And there are those who receive boxes of chicken and fish straight to their door. Many others receive generous shopping vouchers. And more than all the above – families who receive special support for the Yom Tov. Money, in an envelope. All these branches cost a phenomenal amount.

President Trump describes how Europe’s barriers to trade extend far past tariffs: “They drop a bowling ball on the top of your car from 20 feet up in the earth. There’s a little dent, they say ‘No, I’m sorry, your car doesn’t qualify.'”

Shortly before he was forced to resign, the nation’s top vaccine regulator says he refused to grant Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s team unrestricted access to a tightly held vaccine safety database, fearing that the information might be manipulated or even deleted. In an interview with The Associated Press, former Food and Drug Administration vaccine chief Dr. Peter Marks discussed his efforts to “make nice” with Kennedy and address his longstanding concerns about vaccine safety, including by developing a “vaccine transparency action plan.” Marks agreed to give Kennedy’s associates the ability to read thousands of reports of potential vaccine-related issues sent to the government’s Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System, or VAERS.

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