Fire engulfs Denver apartment building under construction, causing power outages

Jan 2 (Reuters) - A large fire broke out in an apartment complex under construction ​in southeast Denver near the Glendale area ‌on Friday evening, causing significant power outages in the community, ‌according to Glendale's police department.

Flames tore through the building's frame as thick smoke rose into the night sky, while fire trucks and flashing lights ⁠filled the street, ‌in images posted by Denver's fire department on X.

One firefighter was injured and ‍was taken to Denver Health, a local hospital, the fire department said in the post.

More than 100 firefighters ​were at the scene of the fire, Robert ‌Murphy, division chief of operations for Denver Fire told ABC affiliate KMGH TV.

"This fire is still not out. Our firefighters are still dumping water on it. It's, you know, deep-seated now ⁠within this building so we're ​trying to reach those deep-seated ​locations and we're going to be here a while and with us here, they're ‍going to ⁠keep Leetsdale (Drive) closed for sure," Murphy said.

Authorities have set up a temporary shelter at an ⁠event center in nearby Glendale, the police said.

(Reporting by ‌Ruchika Khanna and Anusha Shah in Bengaluru; ‌Editing by Susan Fenton)

Fire engulfs Denver apartment building under construction, causing power outages

Jan 2 (Reuters) - A large fire broke out in an apartment complex under construction ​in southeast Denver near the Glendal...
Jets and blasts shake Venezuelan capital

The U.S. launched military operations against Venezuela overnight on Jan. 3, according to media reports.

The blasts came after a United States military buildup in the Caribbean and threats by PresidentDonald Trumpagainst Venezuela's government and its president,Nicolás Maduro. Venezuelan state mediadistributed a statement from Maduro's governmentthat blamed the U.S. for the attacks in the capital of Caracas and in the states of Miranda, Aragua and La Guaira.

The Pentagon and U.S. Southern Command declined to comment to USA TODAY, referring inquiries to the White House, which did not immediately respond to queries. The extent of the operation and its goals were not immediately clear.

The overnight explosions follow a wave of attacks by the U.S. military onalleged drug-trafficking vesselsin the Caribbean and Pacific that began in early September.

Marco Rubio's war:How he ditched a Venezuela pact and opened the door to toppling Maduro

A column of smoke rises during multiple explosions in the early hours of the morning, in Caracas, Venezuela, January 3, 2026 in this screen grab obtained from video obtained by Reuters.

A sizeable American flotilla has amassed in the southern Caribbean Sea, including multiple guided missile destroyers, a missile cruiser, and a Marine Corps amphibious ready group aboard Navy landing ships. The U.S. publicly moved the USS Gerald R. Ford – the world's largest aircraft carrier – into the region in recent months as well.

Just days before the apparent attack, President Donald Trump confirmed that theCIA conducted a land strikeagainst a dock facility in the country.

More:Trump publicly touts CIA-led strikes that are normally kept quiet. Why?

The administration has attacked at least 35 boats traversing international waters, killing at least 115 people − many of them Venezuelans. Trump and other officials have defended the boat strikes as an attempt to stop illegal narcotics, specifically fentanyl, from flooding into the country.

"The Biden administration preferred the kid gloves approach, allowing millions of people — including dangerous cartels and unvetted Afghans — to flood our communities with drugs and violence," Defense SecretaryPete Hegsethsaid in a Nov. 29 post on X, when helashed out at a reportthat he ordered U.S. military officials to leave no survivors during one of the Caribbean sea strikes.

Lawmakers from both parties have criticized the Trump administration's military attacks for providing no intelligence briefings or other evidence about what the vessels are carrying. Some members of Congress, former military officials and legal analysts have said the strikes are illegal and amount to extrajudicial killings thatviolate international human rights law.

Some of those lawmakers also criticized Saturday's strikes and the administration's silence in their immediate wake.

"We have no vital national interests in Venezuela to justify war," said Sen. Brian Schatz, D-Hawaii,on X. "We should have learned not to stumble into another stupid adventure by now. And he's not even bothering to tell the American public what the hell is going on."

Trump has described Maduro, who has been in power since 2013 after the death of populist Hugo Chávez, as running Venezuela like a"narco-terrorist" drug cartelthat is directly responsible for American deaths.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Jets and blasts shake Venezuelan capital

Jets and blasts shake Venezuelan capital

The U.S. launched military operations against Venezuela overnight on Jan. 3, according to media reports. The bla...
Death toll rises to at least 10 in violence around Iran protests

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) — Violence surroundingprotests in Iransparked by the Islamic Republic's ailing economy killed two other people, authorities said Saturday, raising the death toll in the demonstrations to at least 10 as they showed no signs of stopping.

The new deaths followU.S. President Donald Trump warning Iranon Friday that if Tehran "violently kills peaceful protesters," the United States "will come to their rescue." While it remains unclear how and if Trump will intervene, his comments sparked an immediate, angry response from officials within the theocracy threatening to target American troops in the Mideast.

The weeklong protests, have become the biggest in Iran since 2022, when the death of22-year-old Mahsa Aminiin police custody triggered nationwide demonstrations. However, the protests have yet to be as widespread and intense as those surrounding the death of Amini, who was detained over not wearing her hijab, or headscarf, to the liking of authorities.

The deaths overnight into Saturday involved a new level of violence. In Qom, home to the country's major Shiite seminaries, a grenade exploded, killing a man there, the state-owned IRAN newspaper reported. It quoted security officials alleging the man carried the grenade to attack people in the city, some 130 kilometers (80 miles) south of the capital, Tehran.

Online videos from Qom purportedly showed fires in the street overnight.

The second death happened in the town of Harsin, some 370 kilometers (230 miles) southwest of Tehran. There, the newspaper said a member of the Basij, the all-volunteer arm of Iran's paramilitary Revolutionary Guard, died in a gun and knife attack in the town in Kermanshah province.

Demonstrations have reached over 100 locations in 22 of Iran's 31 provinces, the U.S.-based Human Rights Activists News Agency reported.

Iran's civilian government under reformist President Masoud Pezeshkian has been trying to signal it wants to negotiate with protesters. However, Pezeshkian has acknowledged there is not much he can do as Iran's rial has rapidly depreciated, with $1 now costing some 1.4 million rials. That sparked the initial protests.

The protests, taking root in economic issues, have heard demonstrators chant against Iran's theocracy as well. Tehran has had little luck in propping up its economy in the months sinceits June war with Israelin whichthe U.S. also bombed Iranian nuclear sites in Iran.

Iran recently said it wasno longer enriching uraniumat any site in the country, trying to signal to the West that it remains open to potential negotiations over its atomic program to ease sanctions. However, those talks have yet to happen as Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu havewarned Tehran against reconstituting its atomic program.

Death toll rises to at least 10 in violence around Iran protests

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) — Violence surroundingprotests in Iransparked by the Islamic Republic's ailing econo...
Image: Arizona helicopter crash (Pinal County Sheriff's Office)

Four people died in an Arizona helicopter crash Friday after the aircraft appeared to strike a more than half-mile long "recreational slackline" strung across a mountain rage, the Pinal County Sheriff's Office said.

The sheriff's office said that around 11 a.m. it received reports of a helicopter that crashed in the mountains near Telegraph Canyon, south of the town of Superior.

Four family members were killed in the crash, including the 59-year-old pilot, a 22-year-old woman and two 21-year-old women, the sheriff's office said.

"Preliminary evidence indicates a recreational slackline more than one kilometer long had been strung across the mountain range," the sheriff's officesaid in an updateFriday afternoon.

"An eyewitness who called 911 reported seeing the helicopter strike a portion of the line before falling to the bottom of the canyon," the office said.

Recreational slacklining can refer to balancing atop or doing tricks on a narrow webbing that is strung between two points, such as trees, according to theInternational Slackline Association.

The sheriff's office did not provide additional information in its post about the purpose of the line and it was not immediately clear whether it had been set up with authorization.

A spokesperson for the Pinal County Sheriff's Office did not immediately respond to an emailed request for more details late Friday.

The helicopter had taken off from Pegasus Airpark in Queen Creek, around 30 miles west of Superior, the sheriff's office said.

The Federal Aviation Administration said the helicopter was an MD 369FF. The National Transportation Safety Board said it will investigate the crash.

Superior is a town of around 2,400 located in a mountainous area a little more than 55 miles east of Phoenix.

4 dead after helicopter appears to strike recreational slackline in Arizona

Four people died in an Arizona helicopter crash Friday after the aircraft appeared to strike a more than half-mile long "recreational ...
At least 7 explosions and low-flying aircraft are heard in Venezuela's Caracas

CARACAS, Venezuela (AP) — At least seven explosions and low-flying aircraft were heard around 2 a.m. local time Saturday in Venezuela's capital, Caracas.

It was not immediately clear what was behind the explosions. Venezuela's government, the Pentagon and White House did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

People in various neighborhoods rushed to the streets. Some could be seen in the distance from various areas of Caracas.

"The whole ground shook. This is horrible. We heard explosions and planes in the distance," said Carmen Hidalgo, a 21-year-old office worker, her voice trembling. She was walking briskly with two relatives, returning from a birthday party. "We felt like the air was hitting us."

Venezuelan state television did not interrupt its programming and aired a report on Venezuelan music and art.

The blasts come as the U.S. military has been targeting, in recent days, alleged drug-smuggling boats. On Friday, Venezuela said it was open to negotiating an agreement with the United States tocombat drug trafficking.

The South American country's President Nicolás Maduro also saidin a pretaped interviewaired Thursday that the U.S. wants to force a government change in Venezuela and gain access to its vast oil reserves through the monthslong pressure campaign that began witha massive military deployment to the Caribbean Seain August.

Maduro has been charged with narco-terrorism in the U.S. The CIA was behinda drone strike last weekat a docking area believed to have been used by Venezuelan drug cartels in what was the first known direct operation on Venezuelan soil since the U.S. began strikes on boats in September.

U.S. President Donald Trump for months had threatened that he could soon order strikes on targets on Venezuelan land. The U.S. has alsoseized sanctioned oil tankersoff the coast of Venezuela, and Trumpordered a blockadeof others in a move that seemed designed to put a tighter chokehold on the South American country's economy.

The U.S. military has been attacking boats in the Caribbean Sea and the eastern Pacific Ocean since early September. As of Friday, the number of known boat strikes is 35 and the number of people killed is at least 115, according to numbers announced by the Trump administration.

They followed a majorbuildup of American forcesin the waters off South America, including the arrival in November ofthe nation's most advanced aircraft carrier, which added thousands more troops to what was already the largest military presence in the region in generations.

Trump hasjustified the boat strikesas a necessary escalation to stem the flow of drugs into the U.S. and asserted that the U.S. is engaged in an"armed conflict" with drug cartels.

Meanwhile, Iranian state television reported on the explosions in Caracas on Saturday, showing images of the Venezuelan capital. Iran has been close to Venezuela for years, in part due to their shared enmity of the U.S.

At least 7 explosions and low-flying aircraft are heard in Venezuela's Caracas

CARACAS, Venezuela (AP) — At least seven explosions and low-flying aircraft were heard around 2 a.m. local time Saturday ...
Two people killed in magnitude 6.5 earthquake in Mexico

At least two people have died after a powerful earthquake hit southern and central Mexico on Friday.

The epicentre of the 6.5 magnitude earthquake was near the popular tourist town of Acapulco, near San Marcos in the south-western state of Guerrero, which suffered moderate damage.

A 50-year-old woman died in Guerrero, the state's governor Evelyn Salgado said, while Clara Brugada, Mexico City's mayor, confirmed the death of a 60-year-old man and said 12 others had been injured in the capital.

Mexico is situated in one of the world's most seismically active areas, sitting at the meeting point of four tectonic plates.

Late on Friday night, Brugada said power has been restored to "98% of the failures reported" in Mexico City.

Two structures were being evaluated for risk of collapse, she said, while 34 buildings and five homes were being inspected as a preventative measure.

Damage assessments are under way in Mexico City after roads and hospitals were impacted, according to news agency Reuters, while authorities noted various landslides on highways around the Guerrero state.

Mexico's seismological service had registered 420 aftershocks by midday local time (18:00 GMT).

President Claudia Sheinbaum was holding her first press conference of the year when the earthquake struck.

In a videocapturing the moment, Sheinbaum can be heard saying "it's shaking" as an earthquake alert system rings in the background. She then tells the media to "all get out calmly".

Additional footage shows buildings shaking in Mexico City and cars trembling in Acapulco.

An image showing damage inside a pink house after a 6.5 magnitude earthquake in the community of San Marcos, Guerrero state, Mexico. The floor is covered in a pile broken concrete, rubble, and dirt, while a ladder is positioned on the left near shelves and a chair.

After hearing the Mexican Seismic Alert System early on Friday, residents and tourists rushed into the streets of Mexico City and Acapulco.

The seismic system was put into place following the deadly 1985 earthquake that claimed more than 10,000 lives.

In 2017,a 7.1 magnitude quakekilled more than 200 people and toppled dozens of buildings in Mexico City.

Two people killed in magnitude 6.5 earthquake in Mexico

At least two people have died after a powerful earthquake hit southern and central Mexico on Friday. The...
Why ordering takeout or calling the dog walker might lead to a happier relationship

It turns out, love may benefit from a little less labor.

Couples who spend money on time-saving services — like getting takeout, hiring a housecleaner or calling a dog walker — report greaterrelationship satisfaction, especially during stressful periods, says Ashley Whillans, a behavioral scientist and professor at Harvard Business School.

Whillans studies the "tradeoffs people make between time and money."

"When you spend money to save time — hiring an accountant, a babysitter, a cleaner — you feel more control over your life," she said. "That sense of autonomy boosts well-being."

Not everyone can afford to outsource bigger household chores. But Whillans says even a little bit can help. She advises couples to take a "time audit" — examining how they spend their hours and whatsmall changescould reclaim even a few moments.

"People underestimate how much these choices matter," she said. "It's not about luxury — it's about freeing up time to connect."

Whillans' team tracked busy, dual-income couples — partners working full-time who often report feeling time-starved — and found consistent patterns. In one six-week diary study, couples who made "time-saving purchases" on a given day were happier and more satisfied with their relationships.

Use that saved time for connecting

Simply outsourcing chores isn't a magic fix, however.

"It's about being intentional with the time you get back — using it to spend quality time together, to reconnect," Whillans said.

"Think of that half hour not as an opportunity to send more emails, but as a chance to spend time with your partner."

Targol Hasankhani, a Chicago-based marriage and family therapist, stressed that while outsourcing domestic labor can ease daily stress, it doesn't replace communication. Juggling careers and kids takes a toll on families, and housework is often freighted with resentments overwho is doing it.

"If conflict around chores is rooted in something deeper — like inequity or not feeling heard — hiring a cleaner won't solve that," she said.

Couples must dig deeper to address problems with many layers.

"It opens up time and space, but couples still have to know how to show up for each other in that space," Hasankhani said.

Casey Mulligan Walsh, 71, a former speech pathologist and author in upstate New York, said the best part about hiring a housecleaner once a week was that it freed up time for her and her husband to spend together.

"My favorite day of the week was coming home to a clean house," she said. "We'd go get coffee together instead of arguing about who should vacuum."

A Valentine's Day gift that stuck

Getting started on delegating household tasks isn't easy for some couples, Whillans said. Besides the cost, "it takes time to find someone and coordinate — but the long-term payoff is real."

And making such decisions together can deepen trust anda sense of teamwork.

For one Colorado couple, outsourcing started as an act of love.

"When I started dating, my now-husband noticed how hard I was working — at my job, at home and as a single mom," said Melissa Jones, a 45-year-old teacher in Pueblo.

His Valentine's Day gift? A deep housecleaning.

"It was truly amazing," Jones said. "After that, I kept it up on my own for years. When my husband and I moved in together, we decided to continue."

"We're able to make memories with each other, our kids and our families instead of spending weekends scrubbing floors," she said.

Dinnertime can be a stress point

In Miami, Elizabeth Willard, 59, runs The Pickled Beet, a culinary service preparing customized meals.

"Most of the people I cook for are trying to invest in their health but don't have the time," she said, noting that families often juggle mixed dietary needs. "Sometimes the husband's a carnivore and the wife's vegetarian, one child's celiac. They're exhausted trying to make everyone happy."

Her clients, often families with children and two working parents, are "not fighting over what's for dinner. It's one less daily decision."

Whether ordering a pizza, paying a teenager to mow the lawn, or calling a car service to save 20 minutes, the outcome can be the same: Buying back time can buy peace.

Why ordering takeout or calling the dog walker might lead to a happier relationship

It turns out, love may benefit from a little less labor. Couples who spend money on time-saving services — like ...

 

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