The Prime Minister’s Office announced on Wednesday morning that Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu intends to appoint the current Shin Bet Deputy Chief to the position of acting head while he continues his search for a new Shin Bet chief to replace Ronen Bar. The Shin Bet Deputy Chief is known only by S., his first initial. The PMO’s Office said, “Netanyahu continues to interview candidates for the position of Shin Bet Chief, including candidates he has already interviewed.

Following a barrage of overnight airstrikes in the southern Gaza Strip, the IDF has reinforced its presence by deploying an additional division to the region. Defense Minister Israel Katz announced that the military is intensifying its campaign targeting Hamas. In a statement, Katz outlined the escalation of IDF efforts, declaring that Israel is broadening its operations in Gaza. “Troops will move to clear areas of terrorists and infrastructure, and capture extensive territory that will be added to the State of Israel’s security areas,” he said.

Voters in Florida and Wisconsin went to the polls on Tuesday in a series of high-stakes special elections that offered the first significant electoral gauge of President Donald Trump’s second term, just over two months after his inauguration. The outcomes—a pair of Republican victories in Florida’s deep-red congressional districts and a Democratic win in Wisconsin’s Supreme Court race—provided a mixed bag of results, reflecting both the enduring strength of GOP strongholds and the challenges facing Republicans in battleground states. In Florida, two special elections to replace former Republican Representatives Matt Gaetz and Michael Waltz concluded with GOP wins, bolstering the party’s razor-thin majority in the U.S. House of Representatives.

At the Chasunah tonight of the daughter of Reb Shmuel Wallerstein, Rosh Yeshiva of Ohr Yitzchok in Flatbush, to the son of Reb Yossi Brecher (Shaindy to Yitzy). The Chosson is an Einikle of Hagaon HaRav Shlomo Miller of Toronto. (YWN World Headquarters – NYC)

Benny Friedman with Freilach Band keeping the rhythm pumping at a Chasunah on Tuesday night.

Eliya Cohen, a survivor of captivity in Gaza, shared the harrowing details of his experience during an interview on Channel 12 News on Tuesday night.
He spoke about the terrifying ordeal of October 7, when he and others escaping the Nova Music Festival sought refuge in a location later dubbed the “Death Shelter.”
“We heard pickup trucks stopping—many pickup trucks—and shouting in Arabic. They threw the first grenade. Someone screamed, ‘Grenade!’ I jumped on Ziv, shielding her with my body. The first words that came out of my mouth were, ‘Ziv, I love you.’ The grenade exploded, killing everyone at the entrance. Ziv responded, ‘Eliya, I love you too.'”

The New York State Attorney General has intervened to stop a discriminatory pricing practice at a car wash in Rockland County, where Jewish customers were being unfairly charged higher rates under the pretense that their cars required more cleaning.
An official inquiry determined that Super 4 Seasons Car Wash had, for years, taken advantage of Jewish clientele in the weeks before Pesach. The business imposed exorbitant fees—up to three times the regular cost—for the same cleaning services that were offered to others for much less.

In a feat of determination, New Jersey Democratic Sen. Cory Booker held the Senate floor with a marathon speech that lasted all night and into Tuesday night, setting a historic mark to show Democrats’ resistance to President Donald Trump’s sweeping actions. Booker took to the Senate floor on Monday evening, saying he would remain there as long as he was “physically able.” It wasn’t until 25 hours and 5 minutes later that the 55-year-old senator, a former football tight end, finished speaking and limped off the floor. It set the record for the longest continuous Senate floor speech in the chamber’s history. Booker was assisted by fellow Democrats who gave him a break from speaking by asking him questions on the Senate floor.

From France to Iceland to the United States, April Fools’ Day was celebrated on Tuesday with practical jokes and elaborate hoaxes. The jokesters’ custom has been around for hundreds of years, although its exact birth is difficult to pinpoint. These days, depending on your location, it could be marked with a fish secretly pinned to someone’s back or a whoopee cushion or even news reports of flying penguins (yes, that actually happened). In the U.S., the pranks are typically followed by screams of “April Fools!” to make sure all are aware that they were the unsuspecting recipient of a practical joke. Here are some thing to know about April Fools’ Day and its history: Where did April Fools’ Day come from? There are plenty of theories about where this day of pranks and hoaxes came from.

A 63-year-old woman was pulled alive from under the rubble Tuesday about 91 hours after Myanmar was struck by a devastating, 7.7 magnitude earthquake, fire officials said on social media.

Decision Desk HQ projects Susan Crawford (D) wins election to the Wisconsin Supreme Court.

Reporter and author Jonathan Allen revealed Tuesday that former President Barack Obama actively sought to prevent Vice President Kamala Harris from becoming the Democratic nominee after President Joe Biden exited the race, expressing doubts about her chances of winning and pushing instead for a more open nomination process.

The Trump administration has halted several dozen federal research grants at Princeton University, the Ivy League school said Tuesday. The university received notifications this week that grants were being suspended by agencies including the Department of Energy, NASA and the Defense Department, according to a campus message from Princeton President Christopher Eisgruber. The rationale was not fully clear but Princeton will comply with the law, Eisgruber said. “We are committed to fighting antisemitism and all forms of discrimination, and we will cooperate with the government in combating antisemitism,” he wrote. “Princeton will also vigorously defend academic freedom and the due process rights of this University.

WATCH THIS MANIAC MTA BUS DRIVER: On today’s date April 1st, 2025, at 8:03 PM, the driver of MTA City Bus #441 on the B9 line was caught dangerously driving into the oncoming lane at Avenue M and East 19th Street in a reckless attempt to avoid traffic. With passengers onboard, the driver nearly caused multiple head-on collisions, putting countless lives at risk. This outrageous behavior is unacceptable — this driver should be fired immediately

Labor Secretary Lori Chavez-DeRemer revealed that the Department of Labor will be sending more than $1 billion in unused pandemic-related funds back to taxpayers. The move aligns with the Trump administration’s broader efforts through the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) to curb excess spending and improve accountability across federal agencies.
According to a press release from the department, $1.4 billion in leftover COVID-19 relief funds will be “returned to taxpayers through the U.S. Department of Treasury’s General Fund,” while steps are underway to retrieve the additional $2.9 billion that remains.

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