Showing posts with label USA TODAY. Show all posts
Showing posts with label USA TODAY. Show all posts

Thursday, 2 April 2015

McDonald's raises pay for 90,000 workers



McDonald's, which has been struggling with workers protests and sagging sales, plans to increase pay for some 90,000 workers starting in July, the company said on Wednesday.



The pay increase will lift the average hourly rate for its U.S. restaurant employees to $1 above the mandated minimum wage on July 1, the company said. McDonald's said it expects average wages to rise to more than $10 an hour by the end of 2016.

The hamburger chain also announced plans to dole out vacation benefits to employees of the stores it operates, which make up roughly 10% of its U.S. stores, the company said in a press release.

Employees who don't take the time off will be paid for the value of that time, the company said.

An organization of fast food workers who have been pushing for chains to raise wages to $15 a hour criticized the increase as insufficient.

"It's a weak move for a company that made $5.6 billion in profits last year," said Kwanza Brooks, McDonald's worker from Charlotte, North Carolina who is associated with Fight For $15, an organization of fast-food workers that has been protesting wages.

McDonald's workers file 28 burn complaints

Brooks, who said she is paid $7.25 an hour, called the increase a "PR stunt" on a conference call with reporters.

Organizers of Fight For $15 said they will protest the pay increase in front of McDonald's restaurants on Thursday due to concerns that it is insufficient and that it will only benefit 5% of McDonald's workers.

Indeed, the pay increase and vacation benefits apply to employees at stores McDonald's operates — not the company's franchise-operated stores, which make up close to 90% of McDonald's 14,350 U.S. locations.

McDonald's shares fell 1.2% to $96.29 Wednesday.

USA TODAY

McDonald's sales continue to slide

McDonald's announcement mirrors moves by other national retailers to increase workers' pay amid growing concerns over income inequality and calls by President Obama to boost the federal minimum wage to $10 an hour.

Retailer Target last month announced it would raise its minimum wage to $9 an hour starting in April, following news from Wal-Mart that it plans to raise its wages to $9 an hour in April and $10 an hour by the end of 2016.

Worker advocates largely attribute the increases to worker protests the past two years, including at McDonald's stores, calling for a $15 hourly pay floor.

"Fast food workers are rightly demanding a greater share in the profits that McDonald's and other fast-food corporations are earning off their labor," said Christine Owens of the National Employment Law Project. "They are fighting for wages that can lift them out of poverty and support their families."

The pay increase comes as the restaurant giant struggles for ways to boost sagging sales, including bringing in a new CEO and experimenting with offering its popular breakfast menu all day.

McDonald's gives all-day breakfast a test try

McDonald's board named Steve Easterbrook to replace Don Thompson as CEO earlier this year. The company also recently announced plans to offer its popular breakfast menu all day in certain locations — a development the company had previously resisted due to technical difficulties.


New McDonald's CEO: What investors want to know

"Consumer needs and preferences have changed and McDonald's current performance reflects the urgent need to evolve with today's consumers, reset strategic priorities and restore business momentum," the company said last month when it reported disappointing February sales numbers.

The company said same-store sales dropped 4% in its troubled U.S. stores for February, and and 1.7% globally.

CEO Easterbrook said the pay increase is meant to motivate workers.

"We know that a motivated workforce leads to better customer service so we believe this initial step not only benefits our employees, it will improve the McDonald's restaurant experience," he said in a statement. "We'll continue to evaluate opportunities that will make a difference for our people."
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Automakers duke it out at 2015 New York Auto Show

McDonald's raises pay for 90,000 workers



McDonald's, which has been struggling with workers protests and sagging sales, plans to increase pay for some 90,000 workers starting in July, the company said on Wednesday.


Obama's pocket veto on shaky legal ground, experts say

President Obama purported to issue both a pocket veto and a regular veto on the same bill Tuesday, a controversial practice that congressional leaders and some scholars say violates the Constitution.

It's known as the "protective return pocket veto," and there have been just 14 of them issued by Republican and Democratic presidents, all since the Ford administration. Three of Obama's four vetoes have used this hybrid form, but Democrats and Republicans in Congress have objected to the practice and refuse to recognize its validity.



What's the difference? A regular veto can be overridden. A pocket veto cannot. Exercising both vetoes on the same bill could some day lead to a constitutional dispute over whether a bill has become law, experts said.

"The Constitution gives the president two opposing choices. One is the pocket veto, the other is the regular veto. It offers no provision for combining the two somehow. It's a perfectly ludicrous proposition," said Robert Spitzer, an expert on the veto and a political scientist at the State University of New York, College at Cortland. "It's a back-door way to expand the veto power contrary to the terms of the constitution."

The White House would not discuss its legal justification for the form of the veto on the record. But previous presidents have used the hybrid veto "to avoid unnecessary litigation" about the fate of a bill. A spokesman for President George W. Bush once explained that the pocket-and-return veto meant they were "covered either way."

USA TODAY

Obama's fourth veto protects unionization rules

Under the Constitution, there are two ways for the president to veto a bill. First, he can "return it with his objections to that house in which it shall have originated." That's a regular veto, and Congress can override it with a two-thirds vote of each chamber.

If the president doesn't sign a bill, it usually becomes law without his signature. But there's an exception: If the adjournment of Congress prevents the president from returning a bill, it doesn't become law. That's a pocket veto, and it cannot be overridden.

With Congress away on a two-week Easter break, Obama said he was exercising a pocket veto on a labor relations bill, but then also followed the procedure for a regular veto. "To leave no doubt that the resolution is being vetoed, in addition to withholding my signature, I am returning S.J. Res. 8 to the Secretary of the Senate," he said in his veto message.

"It's pure doubletalk, right?" said Louis Fisher, a constitutional scholar and who wrote about the history of the pocket veto during a 37-year career at the Congressional Research Service. "It's gobbledygook."

The double-veto allows Obama to claim to take no action — and so therefore the veto can't be overridden — while still making a political statement that comes from sending a regular veto message to Congress.

"It gives you a chance to make some rhetorical points," Fisher said. "But legally and constitutionally, it looks stupid, and he doesn't care."

The history of the regular-and-pocket veto gambit goes back 45 years, when President Nixon used a pocket veto to scuttle a health care bill that had the votes to be overridden. Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass., successfully sued the Nixon administration, and an appeals court ruled that the president couldn't issue a pocket veto as long as Congress designated officials to receive veto messages while it was away for a short recess.

So Robert Bork, the solicitor general in the Nixon and Ford administrations, invented the protective return pocket veto. In 1974, President Ford pocketed — and returned — five vetoed bills while Congress was on a month-long election break.

After Congress overrode one of his "pocket" vetoes anyway, Ford decided not to challenge the override and allowed it to become law. But since the issue has never been resolved by the Supreme Court, President George H.W. Bush renewed the practice in 1989. He used it twice, President Clinton used it three times, and President George W. Bush once.

But all of those previous uses of the "protective return" veto came during longer recesses — for summer, for elections or at the end of a year.

The Senate sent the bill to Obama's desk last Friday but designated the Secretary of the Senate to receive veto messages — which it received Tuesday.

Obama's veto of the labor relations bill was the first such veto to be exercised over an Easter recess — a 16-day adjournment. And it's the first such Senate bill vetoed that way — an issue that could create a new precedent in the tradition-bound chamber.

The bill Obama vetoed doesn't have the votes for an override. It passed the Senate 53 to 46 and the House 232 to 186, with all Democrats and three Republicans voting no.

USA TODAY

Obama veto threats at record pace to begin new Congress

But with more veto fights on the horizon, the Senate may go through the motions of trying to override the veto anyway, just to assert that the pocket veto wasn't proper. That's what the Democratic House did in 2010, after Obama pocket-and-return vetoed a bill that he said was largely redundant to one he already signed.

Then-Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif, wrote to Obama expressing "profound concern" bipartisan leadership over his use of the pocket veto. "By returning the parchment a president is admitting that he is not prevented from returning it," she argued.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., has not yet scheduled an override vote, and his office said parliamentary experts were studying the situation.

"It's a really goofy way of handling the veto," said McConnell communications director Don Stewart in an email. "He calls it a veto, but..."


Obama's pocket veto on shaky legal ground, experts say

President Obama purported to issue both a pocket veto and a regular veto on the same bill Tuesday, a controversial practice that congressional leaders and some scholars say violates the Constitution.

It's known as the "protective return pocket veto," and there have been just 14 of them issued by Republican and Democratic presidents, all since the Ford administration. Three of Obama's four vetoes have used this hybrid form, but Democrats and Republicans in Congress have objected to the practice and refuse to recognize its validity.

Obama's day: Louisville (and Iran)



President Obama spends Thursday talking about the U.S. economy in Kentucky while continuing to monitor nuclear negotiations with Iran.


In the late morning, Obama travels to Louisville, Ky., to tour a technology company and deliver an economic speech that focuses on Republican plans to repeal the estate tax.
While congressional Republicans say the "death tax" makes it harder for farmers and families to hold on to their businesses, Obama and aides say the estate tax affects very few, very wealthy people.
During the day, Obama will also be keeping an eye on negotiations in Switzerland that involve the fate of Iran's nuclear program. Those talks have already been extended for two days.
The U.S. and other countries are offering to reduce economic sanctions on Iran if it agrees to give up the means to make nuclear weapons. The parties continue to be divided on how to verify Iran's commitments, and exactly how to reduce the sanctions.
After the speech in Louisville, Obama heads to Salt Lake City, Utah, where he will spend the night and deliver more economic remarks on Friday.

Obama's day: Louisville (and Iran)



President Obama spends Thursday talking about the U.S. economy in Kentucky while continuing to monitor nuclear negotiations with Iran.

New Jersey Democrats back Menendez



WASHINGTON — New Jersey Democrats lined up behind Sen. Bob Menendez on Wednesday after federal prosecutors accused him of participating in a bribery scheme with a wealthy donor.

The state's Democratic committee released statements from several New Jersey lawmakers and officials and started a Twitter account — @IStandWithBob — and an identical hashtag to highlight support for Menendez.



Several lawmakers advised reserving judgment until the federal case is adjudicated.

"Our system of justice is designed to be fair and impartial, and it presumes innocence before guilt," said Sen. Cory Booker, D-N.J., calling Menendez an "invaluable resource and mentor." "I won't waver in my commitment to stand alongside my senior senator to serve our great state."

Rep. Frank Pallone, D-N.J., called Menendez "a tireless and effective public servant."

"I have worked with Bob throughout his tenure in the House and the Senate on countless issues of importance to New Jersey, including (Superstorm) Sandy relief, opposing offshore drilling, and fighting for college affordability, and look forward to continuing to do so," he said.

USA TODAY

Menendez indicted on federal corruption charges

USA TODAY

Sen. Menendez has faced ethics complaints before

But watchdog groups and Republicans focused on the seriousness of the allegations.

Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington (CREW), which filed a complaint with the Justice Department in 2012 seeking an investigation into Menendez's conduct, called for Menendez to immediately step down as top-ranking Democrat on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.

On Wednesday, Menendez said he told Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid he would temporarily step down from the position.

"Sen. Menendez deserves a fair trial, but it is not appropriate for him to retain his powerful position within the Congress in light of the allegations against him, some of which could implicate foreign relations," said CREW Executive Director Noah Bookbinder.

The National Republican Senatorial Committee said Wednesday's indictment shows Menendez "has betrayed the trust of New Jersey families."

ONPOLITICS

Menendez indictment: A look at senators charged with crimes

Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chairman Bob Corker of Tennessee expressed appreciation for Menendez's work on foreign relations issues and said he expects Menendez "will continue to play a constructive role."

Though accusations have long swirled around Menendez, he has maintained a 49 percent approval rating among New Jersey voters, said Patrick Murray, director of the Monmouth University Polling Institute.

More support came from longtime supporters in the Jewish community, who back Menendez's positions against a nuclear-capable Iran and his identification with Israel's security concerns.

"Sen. Menendez has stood up for victimized nations, persecuted minorities, and the least fortunate here at home," an American Jewish Committee statement reads. "He has been a strong and clear voice for the interests of New Jersey — and for principled U.S. leadership in international forums."

Rep. Luis V. GutiƩrrez, D-Ill., highlighted Menendez's leadership on foreign policy matters related to Latin America.

"Bob Menendez has never given me any reason to question his integrity, his dedication to honest public service or his commitment to the American people," he said. "As a leader in the House and in the Senate, he has been a key ally in fighting for sensible immigration reform and a touchstone for all matters related to Latinos in this country. He is a friend who is quick with advice, encouragement and good ideas."
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New Jersey Democrats back Menendez



WASHINGTON — New Jersey Democrats lined up behind Sen. Bob Menendez on Wednesday after federal prosecutors accused him of participating in a bribery scheme with a wealthy donor.

The state's Democratic committee released statements from several New Jersey lawmakers and officials and started a Twitter account — @IStandWithBob — and an identical hashtag to highlight support for Menendez.

Dustin Byfuglien's brutal hit could cost Jets a playoff spot



Monster truck-sized defenseman Dustin Byfuglien has always had a gigantic impact on the Winnipeg Jets because of his larger-than-life presence on the ice and lighthearted approach in the dressing room.
He's a very popular with his teammates because he can keep everyone loose.
But depending on what happens in his hearing with the NHL department of player safety Thursday, Byfuglien's memory of this season might be about how he damaged his team's playoff aspirations.
With the Jets hanging on to a two-point lead in the Western Conference wild-card race, Byfuglien committed an act Tuesday that could get him suspended for multiple games with five games left in the season.





In the second period of Winnipeg's game against the New York Rangers, the 260-pound Byfuglien laid a 
wicked cross-check on J.T. Miller's neck to earn himself a phone hearing with discipline guru Stephane Quintal. That means a potential suspension of five or fewer games.
Rangers coach Alain Vigneault said after the game that it was one of the "most vicious cross-checks" he has seen this year, noting that Byfuglien could have broken Miller's neck.
As much as teammates like Big Buff, you know some of them have to be wondering what he was thinking when he cracked down on Miller in a clear case of excessive violence.

A look at the replay shows there was no reason for Byfuglien to use that level of force to subdue Miller. He deserves to be suspended.
Depending upon on what level of suspension that Quintal and his group lay down, this act could damage Winnipeg's playoff aspirations. The Jets were able to overcome Byfuglien's recent injury absence, going 6-3 while he nursed his wounds last month.
But here is what we know for sure: The Jets are a better team when Byfuglien is in the lineup. With his size and booming shot, he is a game-changer. He scored three goals in the first two games after his return.

The Jets have games remaining with the Vancouver Canucks, Minnesota Wild, St. Louis Blues, Colorado Avalanche and the Calgary Flames. These are undoubtedly the most important games the Jets have played since the team moved from Atlanta to Winnipeg in 2011.
If Byfuglien is suspended and the Jets lose games because of it, Winnipeg fans will remember that Byfuglien's indefensible action hurt their team at a time when they were expecting him to carry their team.


Dustin Byfuglien's brutal hit could cost Jets a playoff spot



Monster truck-sized defenseman Dustin Byfuglien has always had a gigantic impact on the Winnipeg Jets because of his larger-than-life presence on the ice and lighthearted approach in the dressing room.
He's a very popular with his teammates because he can keep everyone loose.
But depending on what happens in his hearing with the NHL department of player safety Thursday, Byfuglien's memory of this season might be about how he damaged his team's playoff aspirations.
With the Jets hanging on to a two-point lead in the Western Conference wild-card race, Byfuglien committed an act Tuesday that could get him suspended for multiple games with five games left in the season.


Passing on Alabama, Gregg Marshall opts to remain at Wichita State


Alabama is still looking for a new men's basketball coach, and Wichita State won't have to undertake a search.


Alabama athletics director Bill Battle issued a statement late Wednesday night that Marshall had declined an opportunity at Alabama and decided to remain Wichita State's coach.
The statement read, "I received word tonight that Coach Gregg Marshall has chosen to remain the head basketball coach at Wichita State. I fully respect his decision and wish him and his family all the best. My objective in this search is focused on one goal: to get the best person available to lead the Alabama men's basketball program. I remain determined to bring to our program a proven head coach with impressive credentials, one who understands and values our program, wants to lead our program, and is excited about what can be accomplished at the University of Alabama."
Marshall's son Kellen also had the news, and had a gleeful reaction to it.

Passing on Alabama, Gregg Marshall opts to remain at Wichita State


Alabama is still looking for a new men's basketball coach, and Wichita State won't have to undertake a search.

Brennan: Tiger Woods needs to play Masters next week

Play, Tiger, play.
Play the Masters next week.
Play it even if you're not sure that you've completely figured out your short game. We've already seen you at your worst this year, chunking and skulling the ball over and around the greens at Phoenix and Torrey Pines, and we still want to see you try again.
Play it because watching you remains one of our favorite pastimes, whether it's to cheer you on or root for you to finish last. You're relevant. You still matter to people. That's a gift that doesn't last forever.
Play it because you almost always fare better at the Masters than most people think you will. In this century, you've won it three times and finished in the top 10 eight more times. In the nine years since you last won this tournament, in 2005, you've finished out of the top 10 only twice, which includes last year when you didn't play after having back surgery.

Play it because if you do show up, no one really thinks you will play well, which will make it all the better for you if you do. The Masters was made for you, and you for it. Take 2010. Your life was a shambles after the 2009 Thanksgiving weekend nightmare of your own doing, and you came to the Masters having not played in a tournament all year. So what do you do? You shoot 68-70-70-69 and finish tied for fourth.



Play it because you missed it last year and you can't miss it again this year. Here's why. You're 39. You love the place, and you'll only have so many chances to play it in your best years. Jack Nicklaus won the Masters at 46, and perhaps you will, too, but it's certainly not going to get easier to win as the years go by.

So play it once more before you turn 40.

Unless you're hurt, or worried that you could re-injure your back, play it, Tiger. For heaven's sake, it's the Masters and you're you. It would be almost un-American to not have you there.

Astute readers familiar with the dozens of critical columns I've written about Tiger over the past 15 years might wonder if this is an April Fools' Day joke.

It is not. The Masters needs Tiger Woods. And he needs the Masters. His game is in trouble. He shot a career-high 82 in late January, then withdrew on the 12th hole of the first round the next week with stiffness in his back. And that was the last we've seen of him this year.

FOR THE WIN

9-year-old Rory McIlroy to Tiger Woods: 'I'm coming to get you'

For the first time in his career, he looks truly lost on a golf course. Some wonder if he'll ever get back to some semblance of normalcy. It's a valid question.

So he needs to go to a place where he will always be welcomed. He needs to go to a place he knows as well as any course on Earth. He needs to go home.

Augusta National Golf Club will always open its doors to Tiger, and has ever since his first major victory, at 21 in 1997, when he won by 12 shots.

If Tiger doesn't show up, the Masters will carry on, of course, but it won't have the same energy. Rory is young and interesting and going for the career Grand Slam, but he doesn't come close to moving the needle the way Tiger does. Phil is Phil, as entertaining and appealing as any golfer of this era, but he's still not Tiger.

Tiger's presence makes every tournament eminently more fascinating, and will continue to do so until we are certain he can't be competitive anymore. That day has not yet arrived.

So, Tiger, what else do you have to do next Thursday and Friday? (And perhaps Saturday and Sunday?)

Brennan: Tiger Woods needs to play Masters next week

Play, Tiger, play.
Play the Masters next week.
Play it even if you're not sure that you've completely figured out your short game. We've already seen you at your worst this year, chunking and skulling the ball over and around the greens at Phoenix and Torrey Pines, and we still want to see you try again.
Play it because watching you remains one of our favorite pastimes, whether it's to cheer you on or root for you to finish last. You're relevant. You still matter to people. That's a gift that doesn't last forever.
Play it because you almost always fare better at the Masters than most people think you will. In this century, you've won it three times and finished in the top 10 eight more times. In the nine years since you last won this tournament, in 2005, you've finished out of the top 10 only twice, which includes last year when you didn't play after having back surgery.

Play it because if you do show up, no one really thinks you will play well, which will make it all the better for you if you do. The Masters was made for you, and you for it. Take 2010. Your life was a shambles after the 2009 Thanksgiving weekend nightmare of your own doing, and you came to the Masters having not played in a tournament all year. So what do you do? You shoot 68-70-70-69 and finish tied for fourth.

5 things you need to know Thursday

1. New York Auto Show: It's cars, cars, cars in the Big Apple

It's New York's turn to shine on the auto show circuit, with more than 60 new vehicles to reveal to the media before the New York Auto Show opens its doors to the public on Friday. Cars getting buzz already? A sporty new concept Honda Civic; the updated Hyundai Tucson; Lexus' RX luxury crossover SUV; a new Chevy Malibu ... and of course, the return of the Lincoln Continental. Media access started Wednesday and continues Thursday. The show runs through April 12.

A 2016 Toyota Scion iM is on display on April 1at the New York International Auto Show. (Photo: Mark Lennihan, AP)

2. New Jersey Sen. Menendez scheduled to appear in court

Democratic Sen. Robert Menendez is expected to appear in a Newark courtroom on Thursday following his indictment on corruption charges. Federal prosecutors charged him and wealthy donor Salomon Melgen on Wednesday with participating in a long-running bribery scheme. A 68-page indictment outlines 14 criminal counts against Menendez, 61, including eight counts of bribery. Melgen, a 61-year-old West Palm Beach, Fla., ophthalmologist, faces 13 counts. Menendez has vowed to fight the charges.
Sen. Robert Menendez, D-N.J., leaves a Newark news


3. Iran nuke talks extended to Thursday

The United States and five other world powers are negotiating with Iran on an agreement that limits Iran's nuclear program to peaceful purposes and ensures it does not develop nuclear weapons. Those talks will continue Thursday, after being extended twice past Tuesday's deadline. Marie Harf, spokeswoman for the U.S. State Department, said Wednesday that progress is being made but a "political understanding" had not been reached. The talks have proceeded under a six-month agreement signed in November 2013 that has been extended several times already and is now due to expire June 30.

Here are five major issues that are at the center of Iran's nuclear deal. VPC

4. Deal on Ind. 'religious freedom' law expected Thursday

Indiana Republican leaders are set to announce a deal Thursday morning that alters the state's controversial "religious freedom" law to ensure it does not discriminate against gay and lesbian customers of Indiana businesses. The proposal — which grants new protections for LGBT customers, employees and tenants — is set for a 9 a.m. ET rollout at the Statehouse and a 9:30 a.m. committee hearing. The measure could put to rest some of the harsher criticisms that Indiana Republicans have suffered through in the past week. But it is unlikely to make either liberal or conservative activists happy.
Thousands of opponents of Indiana's Religious Freedom

Thousands of opponents of Indiana's Religious Freedom Restoration Act gather on the lawn of the Indiana State House to rally against that legislation. (Photo: AP)

5. Mom of children found in Detroit freezer set to appear in court
The mother of two children found in a deep freezer in a Detroit apartment is expected to appear in court Thursday on murder charges. Mitchelle Blair was already facing child abuse charges. On Wednesday, prosecutors announced she was also being charged with two counts each of felony murder, first-degree premeditated murder and torture in the deaths of her children Stoni Ann Blair and Stephen Gage Berry. They were found last week at their apartment by a crew carrying out an eviction. Blair is being held on a $1 million bond.
Mitchelle Blair, 35, who is already facing child abuse

Mitchelle Blair, 35, who is already facing child abuse charges, also is being charged with murder in the deaths of her children Stoni Blair and Stephen Berry. The children were found in a deep freezer on March 24, 2015. (Photo: Detroit Police Department)

Bonus: Celebs go head-to-head on Spike TV's 'Lip Sync Battle'

Lip Sync Battle starts Thursday night with hosts LL Cool J and Chrissy Teigen. The show was thought up by Stephen Merchant, Emily Blunt and John Krasinski, who participated in one of the first-ever Jimmy Fallon lip sync battles on Late Night back in 2013. (Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson shared a short teaser for his appearance on the new show on Instagram, and the Internet ate it up.) The show airs at 10 p.m. ET on Spike TV.

And, the essentials:

Weather: More thunderstorms will rattle the central U.S. on Thursday, while most of the East Coast and Southeast will be mild to warm.

The national weather forecast for Thursday, April 2 calls for showers and storms in the Central Plains and rain in the Ohio Valley. VPC

Stocks: U.S. stock futures were lower Thursday.

TV Tonight: Can't decide what to watch tonight? TV critic Robert Bianco looks at The Big Bang Theory, Grey's Anatomy and Elementary.

If you missed this Wednesday's news, we've got you covered here.

Need a break? Try playing some of our games.

5 things you need to know Thursday

1. New York Auto Show: It's cars, cars, cars in the Big Apple

It's New York's turn to shine on the auto show circuit, with more than 60 new vehicles to reveal to the media before the New York Auto Show opens its doors to the public on Friday. Cars getting buzz already? A sporty new concept Honda Civic; the updated Hyundai Tucson; Lexus' RX luxury crossover SUV; a new Chevy Malibu ... and of course, the return of the Lincoln Continental. Media access started Wednesday and continues Thursday. The show runs through April 12.

Al-Qaeda frees 300 inmates from Yemeni jail


Security officials say al-Qaeda militants in Yemen have stormed the center of the coastal city of al-Mukalla and freed about 300 inmates, including scores of militants, and that Shiite rebels have fought their way into the heart of Aden to the west.


The officials say al-Qaeda militants were deployed on Thursday across major roads leading into al-Mukalla in an apparent bid to thwart any attempt to retake the city.
The capture of al-Mukalla comes as a Saudi-led air campaign targeting Iranian-backed Shiite rebels, known as Houthis, enters its second week.
The Houthis and their allies breached the defenses of forces loyal to President Abed Rabbo Mansour Hadi in the coastal city of Aden on Thursday, reaching the city center.

Al-Qaeda frees 300 inmates from Yemeni jail


Security officials say al-Qaeda militants in Yemen have stormed the center of the coastal city of al-Mukalla and freed about 300 inmates, including scores of militants, and that Shiite rebels have fought their way into the heart of Aden to the west.

Fiorina backs religious freedom law, marriage equality



Republican presidential hopeful Carly Fiorina defends Indiana's "religious freedom" law, but she acknowledges the right of same-sex couples to demand equality in the "benefits" government bestows with marriage — views that distinguish her in the party's 2016 field. 


Fiorina, the former Hewlett-Packard CEO who plans to launch a long-shot presidential bid by early next month, didn't explicitly endorse same-sex marriage, but she did outline a stance more moderate and nuanced than those expressed by her prospective rivals.
She blasted business leaders in Silicon Valley and elsewhere who have criticized the Indiana law as discriminatory, questioning why there isn't similar outrage "about the subjugation of the rights of women and gays in many countries in which these companies do business."
"We are having now a clarifying debate about what is really at stake here for gay couples," she told USA TODAY's weekly video newsmaker series. "What's really at stake here for gay couples is how government bestows benefits. What's really at stake here for people of religious conviction is their conviction that marriage is a religious institution because only a man and a woman can create life, which is a gift that comes from God.

Fiorina backs religious freedom law, marriage equality



Republican presidential hopeful Carly Fiorina defends Indiana's "religious freedom" law, but she acknowledges the right of same-sex couples to demand equality in the "benefits" government bestows with marriage — views that distinguish her in the party's 2016 field.