SEATTLE How to become a World Cup 2026 volunteer in Seattle
Seattle, which will host six matches of the 2026 FIFA World Cup, has faced an incredible surge of people wanting to volunteer. Of 35,000 applications submitted to the city committee, only 2,000 were selected. That competition is part of a global record: FIFA said the total number of volunteer applications for the tournament exceeded 1 million, the highest figure in the history of sporting events.
The only stadium in Seattle hosting World Cup matches will be Lumen Field — the home of the Seattle...
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NEIGHBORS Vancouver economy and society: investment, crisis and celebration
Half a million dollars to create 25 jobs, anxiety over the suspension of an overdose prevention site, and free events for seniors — key developments...

SEATTLE Melinda French Gates Pledges $215 Million for Women's Health
Philanthropist Melinda French Gates announced a new $215 million donation aimed at improving women’s health around the world. The funds will go...

EVENTS What to do in Seattle June 4–10, 2026
The first week of June promises to be busy: from large stadium concerts and wine evenings to street festivals, family fairs, and free museum days. On...

EVENTS Event lineup for planning: July 4 – August 3, 2026
For preliminary planning: a selection of major sports and music events from July 4 to August 3, 2026 — baseball, soccer, women's league matches,...

USA Safety, law and vulnerable people: what three recent news stories are saying
All three news items, taken from different cities and even different states in the U.S., at first glance describe unrelated events: a killing at an...
REACTIONS Allies, Rivals and Targets: How South Korea, Brazil and Russia View the US Now
In early June 2026 the United States simultaneously appears to the world as a military superpower, the nervous center of the global economy, and a...

SEATTLE Oregon initiative to ban hunting and fishing moves closer to ballot
Activists in Portland seeking a full ban on hunting and fishing in Oregon have reached a key milestone. Initiative Petition No. 28, filed to expand...

WEATHER 🌤️ 10-Day Weather Forecast for Seattle, Washington
Today, 06/04, Seattle will see variable clouds with comfortable temperatures. High around 70°F, low around 55°F. Wind from the NW at 7 mph, gusts up...

WORLD US Joint Chiefs Chairman Visited Caracas
The Chairman of the US Joint Chiefs of Staff made an unexpected visit to Caracas to hold talks with the Venezuelan government, emphasizing the...
Seattle

Seattle Mayor Failed to Deliver Shelters for the 2026 World Cup
The capital of Washington state is preparing to host matches of the 2026 FIFA World Cup, but a key task in addressing homelessness remains...

Digest: GPS-guided driver, evacuation on the tracks and Mariners’ pitchers
Today's digest brings together three key Seattle stories: a curious incident where a car drove onto light-rail tracks after following GPS, a similar...

Hot day and storms: Seattle's weather rollercoaster
The start of the week in Seattle treated residents to the hottest day of the year — temperatures climbed to 30°C, and in the Cascade foothills and...

Norman Barlow: explosion victim, mentor and "papa" to many
Norman Barlow, a 58-year-old millwright who died May 26 in the implosion of a tank at the Nippon Dynawave Packaging plant in Longview, was not just a...

Oregon Doctor Returns Home After Hantavirus Quarantine
Dr. Steven Kornfeld, an oncologist from Bend, Oregon, has finally returned home after several weeks at the federal quarantine facility in Omaha,...

Seattle Philanthropist Bill Clapp Dies
On May 29, at the age of 84, Bill Clapp, a well-known Seattle philanthropist and civic leader, died after complications from pneumonia. His family...
Seattle News: Weather, Transit and Sports
In today’s edition: a long‑awaited cool down and rain arrive in Seattle after anomalous heat; Mayor Cathy Wilson unveils an ambitious public transit...

Seattle theatre saves summer season after air‑conditioner theft
Nonprofit Taproot Theatre in Seattle faced a serious problem in late April: two of its three air conditioners were brutally damaged — vandals removed...

Genetic verdict fueled a scientific quest
Twenty years ago in a doctor’s office in Vancouver, Jeff and Megan Carroll faced a moment that upended their lives. An envelope held the result of a...
Neighbors

British Columbia: taxes, ferries and whistleblower payouts
Several notable events in British Columbia: Lululemon founder Chip Wilson won a court case, lowering the assessed value of his mansion by $18 million; the regulator paid a whistleblower $25,000 for the first time; and BC Ferries is introducing a temporary five-percent fare surcharge because of rising fuel costs amid the Middle East conflict.
Lululemon founder’s Vancouver mansion knocked down $18 million in assessments
Canadian billionaire and creator of the well-known athletic apparel brand...

Vancouver: taxes, FIFA and "super-adequacy"
Overview of Vancouver's top stories: a court reduced the assessed value of lululemon founder's mansion by $18 million due to "super-adequacy," British Columbia released a new $729 million World Cup budget, and fans are complaining about opaque FIFA ticket sales.
Billionaire Chip Wilson's mansion assessment cut by $18 million: how the appeals panel revised the value of the Vancouver "Golden Mile" home
In Vancouver's luxury real estate world, a notable development occurred: the independent...

Crisis and Recognition: News from Vancouver
A roundup of key events from Vancouver: an attack on a residence, a housing market crisis and international recognition for local restaurants.
Molotov cocktail attack on North Vancouver home: family in panic, police probing motive
One Tuesday evening, a peaceful family life in North Vancouver nearly ended in tragedy. An unknown assailant threw a lit bottle containing an incendiary mixture — a so-called Molotov cocktail — through a window of their home, which is in a four-unit building....

Metro Vancouver: Transit on the Brink of Collapse and a Busy Weekend
Transportation scandal, dangerous driving and festival listings — a digest of news from Vancouver. Transit workers have voted to authorize a possible strike, a driver was caught speeding and impaired, ruining a camping trip, and the city is preparing for a busy weekend with dragon boat races and food events.
Metro Vancouver Transit Workers Nearly Unanimously Authorize Strike
Transit workers across Metro Vancouver made a powerful statement by voting nearly unanimously to authorize a strike. This...

Vancouver Tragedies and Mysteries: News Digest
The digest presents three key stories from Vancouver: a tragic collision involving an elderly man in a motorized wheelchair, provincial officials debunking rumours of evicting unhoused people ahead of the 2026 World Cup, and the mysterious death of a woman kayaker whose identity investigators are trying to determine using pollen analysis.
Tragedy in Vancouver: elderly man dies after being struck by car, police consider mental health angle
A dramatic story is unfolding in Vancouver, Canada, one...

Tragic Week for Divers in British Columbia
Fatal scuba deaths, Kelowna’s culinary recognition and a bear attack in Squamish — the top British Columbia news of the past few days.
Tragic week off British Columbia’s coast: second diver dies during a dive in days
Over the past several days there have been two fatal incidents involving scuba diving off the coast of British Columbia. Last Sunday, at about 1:30 p.m. local time, West Vancouver police received a report of a diver in distress near Whytecliff Park. Despite the prompt response from...
USA

Political Nervousness and Security: How the U.S. Enters the Election Cycle
American politics and public safety today are intertwined far more tightly than a quick glance at isolated news items suggests. Local primaries in Iowa, a fierce race for Los Angeles mayor and a tense hostage standoff in Bakersfield, California — all described in pieces from NBC News, KCII Radio and the NBC News report on the Bakersfield hostage situation (https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/bakersfield-bomb-threat-chase-rcna348174) — together form a picture of a country entering a new...
![MILTON-FREEWATER — The last drive-in movie theater in Eastern Oregon is under new ownership. Mike and Lorie Spiess and family announced on Facebook they have sold the M-F Drive In […]](https://eastoregonian.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/7/2026/06/Moviegoers-park-March-31-2023-in-front-of-the-big-screen-on-the-opening-day-of-the-M-F-Drive-I.jpg?w=500)
Power, Media, and Community: How Institutions of Trust Are Changing
All three stories — the appointment of Bill Pulte as acting director of national intelligence, the expansion of KUT News’s investigative team in Texas, and the sale of the last drive‑in in Eastern Oregon — don’t seem connected at first glance. Together they show how, in the U.S., large federal institutions, local media, and community spaces are changing at the same time. The common thread in all three pieces is the struggle for control over channels of information and for trust in those who...

Fragile Security: From Global Straits to City Streets
The world that emerges from these reports looks, at first glance, fragmented: geopolitical tension around the strategic Bab el-Mandeb strait in a CNN piece, the signing of a promising Russian goalie by NHL club the Colorado Avalanche in a Yahoo Sports article, and a tragic shooting on the streets of Louisville in a WLKY report. But if you look not at genre but at substance, all three stories converge on one theme: the fragility of security and how different societies and systems try to manage...

Vulnerability to Violence: From Global Conflict to Local Crime
Each of the three news stories, at first glance, describes completely different events: the standoff between Iran and the United States amid Israel’s war in Lebanon, a wave of car break-ins in Maryland, and the discovered remains of a missing national laboratory employee in New Mexico. Yet all three strikingly illuminate a single common thread: how modern society lives under increasing instability and perceived vulnerability — from geopolitics to everyday life and personal safety. Through these...
Unexpected Events and the Fragility of Predictability in News
News from very different spheres — a traffic incident in Indiana, a personnel shakeup in the Premier League, and a sharp diplomatic move by the United States toward Iran — at first glance seem unrelated. But on closer inspection they share a theme: suddenness and the fragility of human expectations. In each case we see how the usual course of things is instantly broken — whether it’s a travel plan on a highway, long‑term strategies of top clubs, or the complex architecture of peace talks. This...

The Cost of a Record: How We Tell Stories of Human Effort and Risk
In three seemingly unrelated news items — a historic decathlon day in Götzis, the kickoff of a Senate campaign in Massachusetts, and tragic crime reports from Virginia and North Carolina — a single theme emerges clearly. It's how society evaluates and describes intense human effort and the price people pay in pursuit of results or in the line of duty. Records and points, percentages of delegate votes, bullets stopped by a ballistic vest — these are different measures of the same reality: the...

Courts, Power, and Oversight: How U.S
In three, at first glance different, stories — about renaming the Kennedy Center, halting a multibillion-dollar "anti-weaponization" fund, and a journalism award for reporting on prominent cases — a single thread runs through: a struggle over the limits and rules of power in American democracy. Federal judges, journalists, and civil-rights organizations are engaged, in different ways but essentially the same task: trying to prevent political interests from supplanting law, institutions, and...

Justice, Politics and Violence: How Private Conflicts Blend with State Power
The stories described in pieces by NBC News, Sky News and WTAE at first glance seem entirely different: a criminal probe tied to a lawsuit against Donald Trump, an exchange of strikes between the US and Iran in the Strait of Hormuz, and a workplace dispute in Pennsylvania that ended in a killing. Yet all three reveal a common thread: how conflicts — from interpersonal to geopolitical — turn into violence, and how the justice system and state institutions function (or fail to) at those...

Crises of Trust: From Politics to Security and Justice
The images that arise from reading three news pieces at first glance seem unrelated: the scandal-plagued Democratic primary campaign of Graham Platner in Maine, a manhunt for a suspected killer in Hawai‘i, and an industrial disaster at a chemical plant in Louisville. But looking beyond the facts to the meaning, all three stories form a single narrative — about a crisis of trust in the institutions that are supposed to protect us: political parties, the courts, the police, industrial firms and...
Reactions

The World Watches Washington: Brazil, Germany and Russia on Trump’s US
In early summer 2026 the United States in the foreign agenda looks simultaneously like a superpower waging a war in the Middle East, a country...

How the World Disputes Washington: Ukraine, Turkey and Brazil on US Foreign Policy
In early June 2026 the United States is simultaneously present in almost all of the world's key crises — from the war in Ukraine to the conflict with...

How the World Argues with America: Trump’s Beijing Visit, the War with Iran, and New Fault...
May–early June 2026 made the United States the focal point of intense debates in Asia and Latin America — but not in Washington’s usual role as the...
How the World Sees America: Germany, South Korea and South Africa Facing the New USA
Several debates are converging around the United States in early summer 2026, and in each country they sound different. In Berlin they argue about...

Washington in the crosshairs: how Turkey, Russia and Ukraine debate America's new role
The United States is once again at the center of the international conversation — but today the tone of that conversation is noticeably different...

The World Through Washington's Prism: How Japan, India and France View the US
In early summer 2026 the United States for the rest of the world is no longer simply a "superpower" or "leader of the free world," but a blend of the...
After Hormuz: Saudi Arabia, Germany and Japan Reevaluate America
At the end of May 2026, the United States again found itself at the center of global news feeds — not so much as an unquestioned leader as a source...
Between Support and Suspicion: How Brazil, Japan and Ukraine View the U.S. Today
News from Washington reaches different parts of the world through different prisms, but in Brazil, Japan and Ukraine the U.S. is currently discussed...

How America Became a Trigger: Russia, South Africa and Brazil Rethink the US
In recent weeks the United States has again found itself at the center of other countries’ domestic agendas — not so much because of Washington...
World

Trump Balances Sanctions and War with Iran
The administration of President Donald Trump is trying to maintain a "maximum pressure" policy on Tehran while avoiding a full-scale military conflict. According to media reports, Trump has told aides in private that he does not intend to start a war with Iran unless Iranian attacks lead to the deaths of American soldiers. However, recurring clashes are increasing tension in the White House and call into question the durability of the current ceasefire.
One of Trump's key demands has become the...

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Comments on the news

Delcy Rodríguez announced new contracts to boost oil production
Acting President of Venezuela Delcy Rodríguez confirmed that new contracts providing significant investments to increase oil production will be signed this week, and said results are expected by the end of the year and in subsequent years, stressing the government's commitment to the people's welfare and presenting Venezuela as an open energy partner ready for mutually beneficial cooperation.

Attack on Kuwait Airport: Iran Strikes, U.S. Responds
The Kuwaiti Ministry of Foreign Affairs confirmed one death and several injuries as a result of an attack described as Iranian on Kuwait International Airport. The Directorate General of Civil Aviation reported significant damage to the terminal building from drone and missile strikes, prompting immediate activation of the emergency plan. All flights were suspended, and some were diverted to alternate airports to ensure passenger and staff safety.
Kuwaiti diplomacy said the country "will not...

Trump Announces Possible Agreement with Iran Next Week
US President Donald Trump said Monday evening that a framework agreement with Iran to extend the ceasefire and reopen the Strait of Hormuz could be reached "as soon as next week." However, he clarified that unresolved issues remain and he has not yet given final approval to the deal. In his statement, Trump emphasized that a "peaceful agreement with Iran could be better than a military victory," although negotiations are difficult for both sides.
Trump also noted that talks with Tehran are...

Delcy Rodríguez launches 0800EXTORSION line to fight corruption in the judiciary
Acting President of Venezuela Delcy Rodríguez announced the launch of the telephone hotline 0800EXTORSION, aimed at ending payoffs and extortion in the justice system. "I want to put an end to the matraca (extortion)," she said at the start of nationwide consultations on criminal justice reform. Rodríguez emphasized that this measure is intended to protect honest police officers, prosecutors and judges who suffer because of the reputation imposed by corrupt colleagues, and she called for an end...

Iran Suspends Talks with U.S. Over Israeli Strikes
Iran announced the suspension of negotiations and message exchanges with the United States through intermediaries in protest against ongoing Israeli attacks on Lebanon and the Gaza Strip. According to Tasnim agency, the decision was made after Tehran accused Israel of violating the ceasefire on all fronts. Iranian officials stressed that a ceasefire in Lebanon was one of the key preconditions for any talks, and they will not resume until Iran’s and the “resistance”’s demands are met. This...

US Strikes Iran; Tehran Responds by Hitting Airbase
The US Central Command reported that American warplanes carried out a series of precision strikes on Iranian air defense systems, a ground control station, and also destroyed two suicide drones that, according to the Pentagon, threatened international shipping. The military emphasized that the strikes were conducted on Saturday and Sunday in response to Iran’s earlier downing of an American MQ-1 drone over international waters, calling its actions "defensive."
According to a statement from...

Investigation launched in Venezuela against five police officers for illegal search
The Office of the Attorney General of Venezuela has officially announced the start of a criminal investigation into five officers of the National Bolivarian Police (PNB). They are suspected of conducting an illegal search and of actions contrary to public ethics at an entertainment venue in the city of Barquisimeto, Lara state. The investigation has been assigned to the 21st Prosecutor’s Office of Lara state, which will work together with the 98th National Prosecutor’s Office, specializing in...
Knowledge

Foam cave under the city: how Seattle engineers filled a tunnel with millions of white blocks
Imagine a huge empty cave suddenly appeared under your house. What would you do? That’s exactly the problem Seattle engineers faced when they demolished an old roadway called the Alaskan Way Viaduct. And the solution they found sounds like something out of a sci‑fi movie: they filled that cave… with foam.
This is the story of how sometimes the trickiest problems require the most unexpected solutions, and how an entire city learned to turn old scars into new treasures.
The road that kept the...

The troll who turned a scary spot into a beloved landmark
Imagine a dark place under a bridge that’s frightening even by day. Trash, broken glass, strange people hiding there. That’s what it was like under the Aurora Bridge in Seattle’s Fremont neighborhood. Parents forbade their children from going there, and adults walked around the place. But one day ordinary neighbors decided: enough being afraid! They came up with a way to turn the scariest spot in the neighborhood into something everyone would want to see. Their idea was so unusual that people...

A Spiral You Can Walk Through All Human Knowledge (and Why Engineers Feared People Would…)
Imagine you walk into a library and in front of you is a huge spiral, like a snail’s shell, but the size of a four-story building. You start walking up it, and the books around you change: first about animals, then about space, then about art, then about history. You walk and walk, and in one stroll you can pass every book in the library — more than 780,000! No stairs to climb, no elevator to find. Just walk, and the world of knowledge unfolds before you like a magical ribbon.
Such a spiral...

The Diamond Library That Made Its Neighbors Richer
Imagine that your city decided to build a library that looks like a giant diamond of glass and metal, tilted in different directions. Adults look at the plans and say, "This is too strange! It will cost too much! People will laugh at us!" But the builders go ahead and construct this weird library anyway. And you know what? A few years later it turns out that this "crazy" idea not only worked — it made everyone around it richer. This is the true story of how the Seattle Central Library...

Beer Born from Sadness: How Laid-Off Workers Accidentally Invented the Future
Imagine you walk into a store for juice, and there are hundreds of bottles — but they are all exactly the same. Apple juice from the same company, orange juice from the same company, even cherry juice — again from the same brand. Boring, right? That's exactly how beer in America felt in the 1970s. A few huge breweries made almost all the beer in the country, and it was so similar that people joked, "It doesn't matter which brand you pick — you're still drinking sparkling water."
But something...

River with Secrets: Scientists Turn Detectives to Clean the Dirtiest Water
Imagine you came to clean your room and lifted a rug — and there was another rug underneath. You lift the second — and there’s a third. And so on about ten times. That’s roughly what happened to scientists when they began cleaning the Duwamish River in Seattle. Every time they removed one layer of muck from the bottom, they found another, older and even more poisonous layer beneath it. And to understand where all that pollution came from, scientists had to become real detectives — searching old...

The City That Buried Itself (and Then Dug Itself Up)
Imagine you're walking down an ordinary street in downtown Seattle. Beneath your feet—another street. With old shops, sidewalks and even toilets. A whole city that lay in darkness for more than a century until one stubborn journalist decided to dig it up. And you know what? City officials at first thought he had lost his mind.
This is the story of how one disaster created two problems, then turned into a treasure that helped an entire neighborhood survive.
When Seattle burned to the ground and...

Concrete boxes that became homes for thousands: Seattle's debate
Imagine your city decided to throw away huge concrete boxes the size of a three-story house. Seems like junk, right? But in Seattle those boxes sparked a real dispute. Some said, “Sink them in the ocean!” Others shouted, “Don’t you dare! That’s someone’s home!” And you know what? Those “someones” turned out to be fish, crabs and starfish. The story of how old chunks of bridge became underwater cities taught people to see treasures where others see only trash.
Floating bridges (and why they’re...

Who Gets to Live? How a Seattle Dialysis Machine Changed Medicine
Imagine you have only three seats in a lifeboat, but a hundred people are drowning. Who do you save? A mother with a small child? A doctor who can save others later? Or simply the first three who manage to swim over? It’s the most terrible choice in the world. And in 1960 in Seattle ordinary people — not doctors, not scientists — were making exactly that choice every week. They decided who would live and who would die. And it changed medicine forever.
The miracle machine that created a horrible...
Opinions

The Long Resistance: How a Country in Opposition Learned to Stay
Sixteen months into Donald Trump's second term, something has shifted — not the anger, but where it lives.
In St. Paul, Minnesota, on a Saturday...