logo
Power outage planned in Plaquemine for early morning hours of Father's Day

Power outage planned in Plaquemine for early morning hours of Father's Day

Yahoo2 days ago

BATON ROUGE, La. (Louisiana First) — A scheduled six-hour power outage on Father's Day will impact all City of Plaquemine utility customers.
Entergy Louisiana told city officials that the outage will be from midnight to 6 a.m. June 15.
Crews will be changing out equipment at a substation that powers the city. According to local leaders, the city doesn't get its electrical power from Entergy but uses the company's transmission lines and substation to get power.
Officials encouraged residents to make appropriate plans ahead of the planned outage. Entergy suggests:
Turning off electronic devices and appliances until five minutes after service is restored.
Checking batteries in flashlights.
Turning the fridge thermostat to its coldest setting and keeping the doors closed.
Notify alarm companies if needed.
How to keep Entergy bills low while staying cool this summer
Video appears to show escaped New Orleans inmate Antoine Massey pleading case
Trump team emphasizes immigration in Boulder response
Pop-Tarts brings back 'fan-favorite' flavor after 6-year hiatus
Power outage planned in Plaquemine for early morning hours of Father's Day
Secret recording leads to Fla. child trafficking victim's rescue after sister calls 911: sheriff
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Trump, Vance to attend ‘Les Misérables' opening at Kennedy Center
Trump, Vance to attend ‘Les Misérables' opening at Kennedy Center

The Hill

time11 minutes ago

  • The Hill

Trump, Vance to attend ‘Les Misérables' opening at Kennedy Center

President Trump and Melania Trump, along with Vice President Vance and Usha Vance, are all poised to attend the opening night performance of 'Les Misérables' at the Kennedy Center next week. The musical, based on Victor Hugo's novel, is scheduled to start its month-long run at the Kennedy Center on Wednesday. A White House official confirmed to The Hill on Wednesday a Fox News report that the first family and the Vances would be among the audience members at the show's opening night. 'I love the songs, I love the play,' Trump told Fox News. 'I think it's great — we may extend it,' the president said. 'Les Misérables' is one of the first major productions to be performed on one of the Kennedy Center's stages since Trump overhauled the performing arts institution's board in February and named himself its chairman. The president, who had accused the Kennedy Center of being too 'woke,' appointed his envoy for special missions Richard Grenell as its interim executive director. Trump vowed to 'fix' the Kennedy Center after touring it in March. The president didn't step foot in the Kennedy Center during his first term in office, bucking tradition and declining to attend its annual Honors event after several of the award's recipients criticized him. Vance attended a National Symphony Orchestra performance in March and was met with a chorus of boos from the audience, according to a video posted on social media. On Tuesday, the Kennedy Center denied reports that it allegedly saw a 36-percent decline in sales subscriptions following Trump's takeover of the arts hub. Trump has expressed his fondness for 'Les Misérables' before, often playing 'Do You Hear the People Sing?' during his presidential campaign rallies. –Brett Samuels contributed.

How the FBI Sought a Warrant to Search Instagram of Columbia Student Protesters
How the FBI Sought a Warrant to Search Instagram of Columbia Student Protesters

The Intercept

time12 minutes ago

  • The Intercept

How the FBI Sought a Warrant to Search Instagram of Columbia Student Protesters

Newly unsealed records provide new details about the Trump administration's failed effort this spring to obtain a search warrant for an Instagram account run by student protesters at Columbia University. The FBI and federal prosecutors sought a sweeping warrant, the records show, that would have identified the people who ran the account along with every user who had interacted with it since January 2024. Between March 15 and April 14, the FBI and the Department of Justice filed multiple search warrant applications and appeared numerous times before two different judges in Manhattan federal court as part of an investigation into Columbia University Apartheid Divest, or CUAD, a student group. A magistrate judge denied the application three times in March, a decision which a district court judge later affirmed in April. 'It is unusual for a magistrate judge to reject a search warrant application from the government.' 'It is unusual for a magistrate judge to reject a search warrant application from the government,' said F. Mario Trujillo, a staff attorney at the Electronic Frontier Foundation. 'And it is even more unusual for the government to try and appeal that decision to a district court judge, who again rejected it. That speaks to the lack probable cause in the warrant application.' The records — which include transcripts of hearings with the judges as well as the government's filings — provide a rare blow-by-blow of the search warrant application process, which, in line with normal procedure, was initially conducted under seal. The materials were unsealed on Tuesday as part of a court action originally filed by the New York Times in May, which The Intercept supported. Columbia University and CUAD did not immediately respond to a request for comment. The government first sought a search warrant on March 15, the records show. The Times previously reported that the Department of Justice sought the search warrant after a top official, Emil Bove, ordered the department's civil rights division to find a list of CUAD's members. For a month, the government argued to judges that a March 14 post on Instagram from @cuapartheiddivest — the group was banned from Instagram in late March for violating community standards — was a 'true threat' against the university's then-interim president Katrina Armstrong in violation of federal law. The post referred to the university's use of the New York Police Department to break up campus demonstrations and the targeting of student activists by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement. Screenshot from the government's application for a search warrant targeting the Instagram account of Columbia University Apartheid Divest. Source: Court filing 'The people will not stand for Columbia University's shameless complicity in genocide!' reads the post, in part, next to a photo of graffiti spray-painted onto a Manhattan mansion used as the president's housing at Columbia. 'The University's repression has only bred more resistance and Columbia has lit a flame it can't control. Katrina Armstrong you will not be allowed peace as you sic NYPD officers and ICE agents on your own students for opposing the genocide of the Palestinian people.' 'FREE THEM ALL' reads the graffiti in the photo, alongside an inverted triangle, a much-disputed symbol that pro-Palestine protesters in the U.S. and around the world have used. Hamas, the militant group that ruled the occupied Gaza Strip, has also used the inverted triangle to identify bombing targets, the FBI agent — whose name was redacted — wrote in an affidavit accompanying the search warrant application. The FBI agent wrote that the photograph of the graffiti and message in the Instagram post were sufficient probable cause of an 'interstate communication of a threat to injure, in violation of' the law. Read our complete coverage The argument, made in multiple hearings over the following weeks, failed to convince two judges. Reviewing the initial application, Chief Magistrate Judge Sarah Netburn determined it was a 'close call' and asked for more information about the 'symbolism and context of the posting,' according to a letter from the government. On March 16, Netburn denied the search warrant application, finding the post 'seemed like protected speech' under the First Amendment, the government letter said. The Justice Department quickly appealed the rare denial of a search warrant application. 'Because Judge Netburn's ruling significantly impedes an ongoing investigation into credible threats of violence against an individual, prompt reversal is necessary,' wrote Alec C. Ward, a trial attorney in the Justice Department's civil rights division, in a March 20 letter to a district court judge. Following hearings on March 24 and March 25, which largely concerned the Justice Department's procedural missteps, District Court Judge John Koeltl referred the search application back to Netburn. During a March 28 hearing, Netburn denied the request for a search warrant application once again. Netburn criticized the government for failing to 'clearly represent what the case law is' around the First Amendment and threats. 'Words that may reflect heated rhetoric, in the context in which they are made would not reasonably engender fear, do not constitute a true threat,' Netburn said, ruling that the government hadn't met its burden to establish that the triangle symbol 'in the context here and in the context of the statement that the president of Columbia University will not have peace, is a true threat, as the law identifies.' The government also hadn't indicated whether Armstrong, the interim Columbia president, herself actually interpreted the statements as threatening, which binding precedent from the U.S. Supreme Court requires. 'We have not had an opportunity to put that question directly to Ms. Armstrong at this point,' Ward told Netburn. The FBI had flagged the post to Armstrong's office, Ward said at the hearing, 'conveying its belief that the threat should be taken seriously from a security standpoint.' Ward compared the post to burning a cross outside a residence, which is not protected speech under the First Amendment, saying the two were not 'exactly equivalent' but still comparable as 'symbolic threats.'

Trump once floated a plan to attract more foreign students. Now they feel targeted on all fronts.
Trump once floated a plan to attract more foreign students. Now they feel targeted on all fronts.

Boston Globe

time15 minutes ago

  • Boston Globe

Trump once floated a plan to attract more foreign students. Now they feel targeted on all fronts.

An avalanche of policies from the Trump administration — such as terminating students' ability to study in the U.S., halting all new student visa interviews, moving to block foreign enrollment at Harvard — have triggered lawsuits, countersuits and confusion for international students who say they feel targeted on multiple fronts. Get Starting Point A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday. Enter Email Sign Up In interviews, students from around the world described how it feels to be an international student today in America. Their accounts highlight pervasive feelings of fear, anxiety and insecurity that have made them more cautious in their daily lives, distracted them from schoolwork and prompted many to cancel trips home because they fear not being allowed to return. Advertisement For many, the last few months have forced them to rethink their dreams of building a life in America. A standout student from Latvia feels 'expendable' Markuss Saule, a freshman at Brigham Young University-Idaho, took a recent trip home to Latvia and spent the entire flight back to the U.S. in a state of panic. Advertisement For hours, he scrubbed his phone, uninstalling all social media, deleting anything that touched on politics or could be construed as anti-Trump. 'That whole 10-hour flight, where I was debating, 'Will they let me in?' — it definitely killed me a little bit,' said Saule, a business analytics major. 'It was terrifying.' Saule is the type of international student the U.S. has coveted. As a high schooler in Latvia, he qualified for a competitive, merit-based exchange program funded by the U.S. State Department. He spent a year of high school in Minnesota, falling in love with America and a classmate who is now his fiancee. He just ended his freshman year in college with a 4.0 GPA. But the alarm he felt on that flight crushed what was left of his American dream. 'If you had asked me at the end of 2024 what my plans were, it was to get married, find a great job here in the U.S. and start a family,' said Saule, who hopes to work as a business data analyst. 'Those plans are not applicable anymore. Ask me now, and the plan to leave this place as soon as possible.' Saule and his fiancee plan to marry this summer, graduate a year early and move to Europe. This spring the Trump administration abruptly revoked permission to study in the U.S. for thousands of international students before reversing itself. A federal judge has blocked further status terminations, but for many, the damage is done. Saule has a constant fear he could be next. As a student in Minnesota just three years ago, he felt like a proud ambassador for his country. Advertisement 'Now I feel a sense of inferiority. I feel that I am expendable, that I am purely an appendage that is maybe getting cut off soon,' he said. Trump's policies carry a clear subtext. 'The policies, what they tell me is simple. It is one word: Leave.' From dreaming of working at NASA to 'doomscrolling' job listings in India A concern for attracting the world's top students was raised in the interview Trump gave last June on the podcast 'All-In.' Can you promise, Trump was asked, to give companies more ability 'to import the best and brightest' students? 'I do promise,' Trump answered. Green cards, he said, would be handed out with diplomas to any foreign student who gets a college or graduate degree. Trump said he knew stories of 'brilliant' graduates who wanted to stay in the U.S. to work but couldn't. 'They go back to India, they go back to China' and become multi-billionaires, employing thousands of people. 'That is going to end on Day One.' Had Trump followed through with that pledge, a 24-year-old Indian physics major named Avi would not be afraid of losing everything he has worked toward. After six years in Arizona, where Avi attended college and is now working as an engineer, the U.S. feels like a second home. He dreams of working at NASA or in a national lab and staying in America where he has several relatives. But now he is too afraid to fly to Chicago to see them, rattled by news of foreigners being harassed at immigration centers and airports. 'Do I risk seeing my family or risk deportation?' said Avi, who asked to be identified by his first name, fearing retribution. Avi is one of about 240,000 people on student visas in the U.S. on Optional Practical Training — a postgraduation period where students are authorized to work in fields related to their degrees for up to three years. A key Trump nominee has said he would like to see an end to postgraduate work authorization for international students. Advertisement Avi's visa is valid until next year but he feels 'a massive amount of uncertainty.' He wonders if he can sign a lease on a new apartment. Even his daily commute feels different. 'I drive to work every morning, 10 miles an hour under speed limit to avoid getting pulled over,' said Avi, who hopes to stay in the U.S. but is casting a wider net. 'I spend a lot of time doomscrolling job listings in India and other places.' A Ukrainian chose college in America over joining the fight at home — for now Vladyslav Plyaka came to the U.S. from Ukraine as an exchange student in high school. As war broke out at home, he stayed to attend the University of Wisconsin. He was planning to visit Poland to see his mother but if he leaves the U.S., he would need to reapply for a visa. He doesn't know when that will be possible now that visa appointments are suspended, and he doesn't feel safe leaving the country anyway. He feels grateful for the education, but without renewing his visa, he'll be stuck in the U.S. at least two more years while he finishes his degree. He sometimes wonders if he would be willing to risk leaving his education in the United States — something he worked for years to achieve — if something happened to his family. 'It's hard because every day I have to think about my family, if everything is going to be all right,' he said. Advertisement It took him three tries to win a scholarship to study in the U.S. Having that cut short because of visa problems would undermine the sacrifice he made to be here. He sometimes feels guilty that he isn't at home fighting for his country, but he knows there's value in gaining an education in America. 'I decided to stay here just because of how good the college education is,' he said. 'If it was not good, I probably would be on the front lines.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store