At least 15 hurt after driver plows car into Louisiana parade crowd

At least 15 people were injured after a driver plowed a car into a crowd during a parade in Louisiana on Saturday, April 4, according to authorities and multiple reports.

USA TODAY

The Iberia Parish Sheriff's Officesaid in a Facebook postthat deputies are investigating an incident involving a vehicle that struck pedestrians during a parade in New Iberia, a small Cajun town in southern Louisiana, about 30 minutes from Lafayette. As a result, "several individuals sustained injuries, some of which are believed to be serious," the sheriff's office added.

Louisiana State Police said they arrested the driver, a 57-year-old man, and charged him with driving while impaired, 18 counts of first-degree negligent injuring and careless operation, Reuters reported. Police said he is also accused of having an open container with an alcoholic beverage in the vehicle.

The incident occurred during the Louisiana Lao New Year Festival, with itsorganizers on Facebook sending well wishesand announcing that its Saturday night music programs will be canceled, including live concerts and alcohol sales, "in the interest of public safety."

The festival typically occurs on Easter weekend and celebrates the Lao New Year, according to the organizers' Facebook page.

"We are profoundly saddened by the news of the incident near the festival grounds," the organizers' post reads. "We are awaiting additional details from authorities as they become available. All security resources have been redirected to the scene, and we currently do not have security personnel available due to the circumstances."

Organizers added, "We are praying for the victims and for their families during this difficult time."

Headlights become clouded or yellowed after years of use, creating a major safety concern for motorists. AAA finds that the average 11-year-old vehicle's headlights generate 20 percent of the illumination as new headlights. Headlights become clouded or yellowed after years of use, creating a major safety concern for motorists. AAA finds that the average 11-year-old vehicle's headlights generate 20 percent of the illumination as new headlights. Headlights become clouded or yellowed after years of use, creating a major safety concern for motorists. AAA finds that the average 11-year-old vehicle's headlights generate 20 percent of the illumination as new headlights. Headlights become clouded or yellowed after years of use, creating a major safety concern for motorists. AAA finds that the average 11-year-old vehicle's headlights generate 20 percent of the illumination as new headlights. Headlights become clouded or yellowed after years of use, creating a major safety concern for motorists. AAA finds that the average 11-year-old vehicle's headlights generate 20 percent of the illumination as new headlights. Headlights become clouded or yellowed after years of use, creating a major safety concern for motorists. AAA finds that the average 11-year-old vehicle's headlights generate 20 percent of the illumination as new headlights. Headlights become clouded or yellowed after years of use, creating a major safety concern for motorists. AAA finds that the average 11-year-old vehicle's headlights generate 20 percent of the illumination as new headlights. Headlights become clouded or yellowed after years of use, creating a major safety concern for motorists. AAA finds that the average 11-year-old vehicle's headlights generate 20 percent of the illumination as new headlights. Headlights become clouded or yellowed after years of use, creating a major safety concern for motorists. AAA finds that the average 11-year-old vehicle's headlights generate 20 percent of the illumination as new headlights. Headlights become clouded or yellowed after years of use, creating a major safety concern for motorists. AAA finds that the average 11-year-old vehicle's headlights generate 20 percent of the illumination as new headlights. Do-it-yourself restoration greatly improved the performance of this headlight. This headlight had become clouded after years of use.

Cloudy headlights pose huge safety risk, AAA study finds

Iberia Parish Sheriff's Office confirms 15 people were injured

At least 15 were injured as a result of the incident, according tolocal TV station KATC NewsandThe New York Times, both citing the Iberia Parish Sheriff's Office.

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At the time of the incident, the crowd was gathered at a nearby intersection for the parade, KATC reported.

In a post on social media Acadian Ambulance said that it transported 13 people to the hospital. Two of them were airlifted, the ambulance service wrote on X, Reuters reported.

In a statement provided to USA TODAY, a local hospital spokesperson said, "We are actively caring for patients who were transported to our facility, Ochsner Lafayette General Medical Center, following the incident in New Iberia."

The hospital added, "Our teams are focused on providing the highest level of care. Due to patient privacy, we're unable to share specific details about individuals." The hospital did not say how many of the injured individuals it was treating or their conditions, calling the situation "dynamic."

USA TODAY contacted the Iberia Parish Sheriff's Office on April 4 for information on the number of victims, but has not received a response.

Louisiana governor 'praying for all those affected'

In a Facebook post on Saturday,Louisiana Gov. Jeff Landry saidhe and his wife, Sharon, "are praying for all those affected, and are grateful for the first responders who have responded to the scene."

Louisiana Attorney General Liz Murrillalso issued a statement on Facebook, saying, "I'm praying for all those injured and impacted by this terrible tragedy and will be following up with responding law enforcement agencies to offer support."

Contributing: Reuters

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:At least 15 injured after car is plowed into Louisiana parade crowd

At least 15 hurt after driver plows car into Louisiana parade crowd

At least 15 people were injured after a driver plowed a car into a crowd during a parade in Louisiana on Saturday, April ...
Ousted Army chief of staff says soldiers deserve

Ousted Army Chief of Staff, Gen. Randy George, told Pentagon officials in anoutgoing emailthat U.S. soldiers deserve "courageous leaders of character," after Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth asked him to step down and take immediate retirement.

CBS News

CBS News exclusivelyreported earlier this weekon the general's ousting, with one source saying Hegseth wants someone in the role who will implement his and President Trump's vision for the Army.

An outgoing email, attributed to George and confirmed as authentic by CBS News on Saturday, circulated online after his ousting. A U.S. official told CBS News that George sent the email to Driscoll, the undersecretary and assistant secretary of the Army, as well as to the three- and four-star generals and officers on his staff.

"It has been the greatest privilege to serve beside you and lead Soldiers in support of our country," he wrote. "I know you'll all continue to stay laser-focused on the mission, continue innovating, and relentlessly cut through the bureaucracy to get our warfighters what they need to win on the modern battlefield."

He added: "Our soldiers are truly the best in the world – they deserve tough training and courageous leaders of character. I have no doubt you will all continue to lead with courage, character, and grit."

George previously served as the senior military assistant to Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin from 2021 to 2022, during the Biden administration. He became Army chief of staff, typically a four-year post, in 2023.

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Chief Pentagon spokesperson Sean Parnellsaidin a statement that George "will be retiring from his position as the 41st Chief of Staff of the Army effective immediately. The Department of War is grateful for General George's decades of service to our nation. We wish him well in his retirement."

The current vice chief of staff of the Army, Gen. Christopher LaNeve, who was formerly Hegseth's military aide, will be acting Army chief of staff.

Hegseth has fired more than a dozen senior military officers, includingChairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen. C.Q. Brown, Chief of Naval Operations Adm. Lisa Franchetti, the Air Force Vice Chief of Staff Gen. James Slife and the head of theDefense Intelligence Agency Lt. Gen. Jeffrey Kruse.

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Ousted Army chief of staff says soldiers deserve "courageous leaders" in email

Ousted Army Chief of Staff, Gen. Randy George, told Pentagon officials in anoutgoing emailthat U.S. soldiers deserve ...
Inside the Original

'Dallas' premiered on April 2, 1978, becoming an instant hit and running for 14 seasons over 13 years

People The cast of 'Dallas'.Credit: CBS Photo Archive/Getty

NEED TO KNOW

  • The beloved soap opera went on to launch spinoffs, reunion movies and a TNT revival, solidifying its legacy across generations

  • Several of the original cast members continued acting and many have reflected on how the series changed their lives

Dallaspremiered 48 years ago on April 2, 1978.

The CBS soap opera became an instant hit and launched the careers of several of its stars — includingLarry Hagman,Ken Kercheval, Barbara Bel Geddes,Patrick DuffyandLinda Gray, among others. The show ran for 14 seasons and 13 years before it came to an end on May 3, 1991.

AlthoughDallasconcluded in 1991, it launched the spinoff seriesKnots Landing, two reunion movies and a TNT revival series. Just like its generation-spanning fanbase, the show's cast has previously looked back fondly on their time on the show.

"I think thatDallaswas like daytime soaps that were very popular andDallascame into play and it wasgigantic and it filled that same needthat people love to have a recurring story, suspense and something to look forward to," Gray told PEOPLE when the cast reunited in 2023.

While many of the show's stars reunited for the 45th anniversary in 2023, some of the cast members have died since the show ended.

Here's everything to know about where the originalDallascast is now.

Larry Hagman

Larry HagmanCredit: getty (2)

While Hagman did pursue other acting opportunities after the originalDallasseries wrapped, his leading role as J.R. Ewing remained at the forefront of his career until hedied at age 81.

Hagman reprised the breakout character in the '90s TV moviesJ.R. ReturnsandWar of the Ewingsand again in 2011, when TNT rebooted the series.

Hagman announced that he'd been diagnosed with stage 2 throat cancer in 2011, over 15 years after he'd undergone a liver transplant. Hagman died on Nov. 23, 2012, due to complications from his cancer, thoughhis legacy lives onthrough his costars and friends.

Ken Kercheval

Ken KerchevalCredit: getty (2)

After getting his start on Broadway, Kercheval moved over to TV with cameos and soap opera roles in the mid-'60s. He made it big on the small screen when he starred onDallasas Cliff Barnes, the rival of J.R. Ewing.

Kercheval and Hagman were the only two actors who remained cast members throughoutDallas' original 13-season run. He also appeared as Cliff in all three seasons of the 2012 reboot.

Beforehis death in 2019, Kercheval made appearances in several TV movies throughout the 1990s and returned to theater in the mid-aughts. He played The General in U.K. productions ofWhite Christmasfrom 2006 to 2011.

Barbara Bel Geddes

Barbara Bel GeddesCredit: getty; shutterstock

Geddes finished her acting career playingDallasmatriarch Miss Ellie Ewing. The actress retired from screens and stages in 1990, after 12 seasons on the CBS soap, and shedied of lung cancer in 2005, at age 82.

Geddes established herself as a star long beforeDallas. She won awards for her performance in the Broadway showDeep Are the Roots. Her other theatrical hits during the 1950s and 1960s included productions likeThe Moon Is Blue,Cat on a Hot Tin RoofandMary, Mary.

In Hollywood, she earned critical acclaim for her film and TV work. Geddes was nominated for a Best Supporting Actress Academy Award for her role in the 1948 movieI Remember Mama. She appeared in a couple of Alfred Hitchcock productions as well, including his 1958 psychological thrillerVertigoand a few episodes of his anthology seriesAlfred Hitchcock Presents.

Patrick Duffy

Patrick DuffyCredit: getty (2)

Patrick Duffyplayed J.R.'s older brother Bobby Ewing, who was famously (and controversially) killed off and brought back one season later. After the final season of the originalDallas, Duffy starred alongside Suzanne Somers on the sitcomStep by Step, which ran from 1991 to 1998.

The actor returned to the soap opera sphere in 2006, playing Stephen Logan onThe Bold and the Beautiful. He departed the show after five years, but did return in 2022 for atwo-episode stint, which featured his real-life girlfriendLinda Purlplaying Duffy's love interest. (Duffy's wife of over 40 years, Carlyn Rosser, died of cancer in 2017).

Beyond his TV roles and other cameos, theDallasalum also appeared in films likeYou Again(2010) andLady of the Manor(2021).

Linda Gray

Linda GrayCredit: getty (2)

After starring onDallasas Sue Ellen Ewing,Grayshared the screen with Sylvester Stallone in the 1991 comedyOscar. Then, in the early aughts, the actress took to the stage, appearing in productions ofThe Graduateon the West End and on Broadway.

Gray appeared on shows likeMelrose Place, its spinoffModels Inc. and on90210, another spinoff from the same franchise. She reprised herDallasrole in the TV moviesJ.R. ReturnsandWar of the Ewingsand the series' continuation on TNT in 2012.

More recently, Gray furthered her TV career in the Hallmark filmA Perfect Wedding,the 2023 Lifetime filmLadies of the '80s: A Divas Christmasand on the CW comedy seriesSignificant Mother. Hersoap stardomspans across the pond, too: Gray played Tabitha Maxwell-Brown in Britain's Channel 4 showHollyoaks.

Steve Kanaly

Steve KanalyCredit: getty (2)

After playing Jock Ewing's illegitimate son Ray Krebbs, Steve Kanaly played Seabone Hunkle on the soapAll My Childrenfrom 1994 to 1995.

Like his costars, the actor appeared in one of theDallas-based TV movies, and he guest starred in four episodes of the reboot. His last known credit has been acting inDeVanityin 2014.

Howard Keel

Howard KeelCredit: getty (2)

Before his death in 2004, Howard Keel made a name for himself as a singer and actor, best known for his portrayal of Clayton Farlow onDallas. While on the show, Keel released more albums and continued the musical career he established in theatrical performances and MGM musicals.

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He slowed his performances down in the mid-'90s, afterDallas.However, Keel's talents were still recognized after he died of colon cancer: In 2019, the multi-hyphenate star was inducted into the Western Performers Hall of Fame.

Victoria Principal

Victoria PrincipalCredit: getty (2)

Victoria PrincipalleftDallasin 1987, after nine years on the series.

Three decades later, she explained to PEOPLE that she felt there was "a definitive decline" in the show's quality. AsDallascontinued without her character, Pamela Barnes, Principal went on to guest star on other shows and star in TV movies, several of which were produced by her own production company.

After the turn of the century, Principal stepped away from screens and focused on her wellness projects. She has her own line of skincare products, Principal Secret, and has written four books on the subject of personal health.

Charlene Tilton

Charlene TiltonCredit: getty (2)

Charlene Tiltonstarted playing Lucy Ewing when she was just a teenager. The actress was beloved by many for her darling looks — though in 2023, Tilton told PEOPLE that she"had no idea"how beautiful she was during those years of child stardom.

Post-Dallas, Tilton starred in big- and small-screen movies. She revisited the legendary soap for its reboot in 2012, though she's since diversified her character work. Today the all-grown-up starlet appears in TV movies for faith-based streaming services and cable networks, like the Hallmark Channel.

Priscilla Presley

Priscilla PresleyCredit: getty (2)

Priscilla Presleywas the third actress to star as Jenna Krebbs inDallas.She played Bobby's ex-fiancé from 1983 through 1988 and then went on star in the threeNaked Gunfranchise films. Presley also appeared in shows likeMelrose Place,Touched by an AngelandSpin Citybefore stepping away from acting.

She has, however, continued producing pieces of entertainment to honor her late ex-husband,Elvis Presley. She worked on the 1998 dramaFinding Gracelandand was the executive producer of a postmortem album release of his archival recordings in 2015. Most recently, she co-created the Netflix animationAgent Elvis, where she voiced thecartoon version of herselfin the series. A movie on her relationship with Elvis, simply calledPriscilla, also premiered to critical acclaim in 2023.

Presley's family life has also evolved in the years since her famed soap stint. She became a grandmother of four through her only daughter,Lisa Marie Presley— whodied at age 54in January 2023.

Lisa Marie's daughterRiley Keoughwelcomed theDallasstar'sfirst great-grandchildin 2022 andsecond in early 2025.

Susan Howard

Susan HowardCredit: courtesy everett collection; getty

After she stopped playing Donna Krebbs onDallas, Susan Howard hostedThe 700 Clubon the Christian Broadcasting Network for one year.

Howard has been married twice, first to Charles Howerton, with whom she welcomed her daughter Lynn, and then to Calvin Chrane.

She's since left television and has actively advocated for gun rights organizations like the National Rifle Association.

Jim Davis

Jim DavisCredit: CBS Photo Archive/Getty

Jim Davis died at age 71 after playing family patriarch Jock Ewing for four years.

Beyond his starring role onDallas, the actor is remembered for his prominence in many western films and television shows from the mid-century until his death in 1981.

Audrey Landers

Audrey LandersCredit: courtesy everett collection; getty

Audrey Landers played nightclub singer Afton Cooper from 1981 through 1984, returning briefly in 1989 for a six-episode reappearance.

She further employed her musical talents as Val Clarke in the 1985 film version ofA Chorus Line, and in 1996, she and her mother created a television series calledThe Huggabug Club.

As a singer, Landersremains activein the industry, recording albums and performing in concerts around the world.

Sheree Wilson

Sheree WilsonCredit: courtesy everett collection; getty

Sheree Wilson played April Ewing in the later seasons ofDallas, from 1986 through 1991.

She continued to nab movie roles and guest star spots on TV. On multiple occasions, Wilson has shared the screen withChuck Norris, starring in the 1994 thrillerHellbound, his seriesWalker, Texas Rangerand its TV film adaptation.

Wilson can most recently be spotted in the TV movieA Mermaid for Christmasand the biographical dramaThe Silent Natural, both of which premiered in 2019.

Cathy Podewell

Cathy PodewellCredit: getty (2)

Cathy Podewell appeared as J.R.'s second wife, Cally Ewing, in the final three seasons ofDallas.

She went on to guest star on television shows, including one episode of the TNT reboot's second season. Beyond her role in the 2021 horror filmReunion from Hell, Podewell has largely stepped out of the spotlight to focus on her three children.

Read the original article onPeople

Inside the Original “Dallas” Cast's Lives 48 Years After the Show Premiered

'Dallas' premiered on April 2, 1978, becoming an instant hit and running for 14 seasons over 13 years N...
Halle Bailey Says Her 'Village' Helps Her as a Working Single Mom to Raise Halo, 2: 'You Don't Do It Alone' (Exclusive)

Halle Bailey opens up about being a busy working mom to son Halo, 2

People

NEED TO KNOW

  • She credits her "village" of women in her life who support her as a single mom

  • "He's made me more sure of myself," she says of her toddler

Mom's the word forHalle Baileythese days.

In this week's issue of PEOPLE theYou, Me & Tuscanystar, 26,opens up about her journeyto and through motherhood⸺and describes the loving community that supports her as she raises2-year-old son Halo.

"I think after I had my baby I was like, 'I'm grown-grown now,'" she says, with a wink to her past role on TV'sGrown-ish. "He's made me more sure of myself and confident in my voice. 'Stronger' is my word for this year."

Halle BaileyCredit: Shayan Asgharnia/August

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Bailey's been a fierce protector of her son, who she shares withex DDG, since before he was born.

She chose not to confirm her pregnancy or Halo's birth until she was ready, later explaining in atearful 2024 speechat theEssenceBlack Women in Hollywood honors: "Halo was my gift. He is the greatest blessing, and I had no obligation to expose him, me or my family to that unyielding spotlight."

These days, the tot makes occasional smiley appearances on his mom's social media. "It's very trippy to have a whole being grow inside you and now to see them run around and be their own person. I cry every day. I'm just obsessed."

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Halle Bailey and son HaloCredit: Halle Bailey/Instagram

She's not the only one. As a single mom following hersplit from DDG, Bailey credits her close-knit crew, includingbig sister Chloe, for helping her raise Halo while she maintains a hectic Hollywood work schedule.

"You don't do it alone," she says. "I feel grateful that I have beautiful women in my life that surround me and lift me up and that are my village. It's a village job."

She continues, "Especially when you're trying to work on so many different things. You're trying to do your career as well as balance [motherhood], but I feel like women, we can do it all. Like we really can. We need to give ourselves more credit as women sometimes, too, and know that we are amazing."

When it is just her and Halo, Bailey says she makes the most of that time. "We love walks, hikes and just being in nature," she says of their free-time activities. And the two recently had the adventure of a lifetime in Italy where she brought him along to film.

Halle Bailey and Regé-Jean Page in 'You, Me & Tuscany'Credit: Giulia Parmigiani/Universal Pictures

"We were in Rome for the first like three, four weeks. On one of my off days, I found this really beautiful place," she says. "It was like a fresh water waterfall an hour outside of the city. It's called Narni or something. All the locals were saying the movie Narnia was based off of this little place."

Once they were there, "I felt like I was stepping into a fairytale land. I took so many pictures. The water was super cold, but I had to get in it. He loves water. He's a water baby. We were having so much fun."

For more on Halle Bailey's motherhood journey new rom-com, pick up this week's issue, available now.

Read the original article onPeople

Halle Bailey Says Her ‘Village’ Helps Her as a Working Single Mom to Raise Halo, 2: 'You Don't Do It Alone' (Exclusive)

Halle Bailey opens up about being a busy working mom to son Halo, 2 NEED TO KNOW She credits her "village...
Eulogy for the CIA Factbook: The free standard for world facts, long an educational staple, is gone

If you attended school any time after the Nixon administration, then you likely beheld at some point theCIA World Factbook,a map and reference manual of Planet Earth and its inhabitants upon which nearly everyone could agree.

Associated Press FILE - The seal of the Central Intelligence Agency at CIA headquarters in Langley, Va., April 13, 2016. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster, File) CIA Director John Ratcliffe listens during a House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence hearing to examine worldwide threats, Thursday, March 19, 2026, on Capitol Hill in Washington. (AP Photo/Tom Brenner)

Farewell Factbook

Maybe you read parts of it from a floppy disk or a CD-ROM for that social studies project due tomorrow. Or scanned its list of countries for Latvia, because that is the country you are representing next week in Model U.N. Even better, you wandered the earth in your imagination as you held the physical Factbook in your own hands, unfolding its maps and understanding, perhaps for the first time, that the thumbs-up gesture your friends flash each other is considered an obscene insult in parts of the Middle East, Europe and Argentina.

Who knew? The Factbook and its readers did,for more than six decades.

Its authors — some of the world's best intelligence-gatherers, who contributed thousands of their own photos — kept the curated database updated and online for public use at no charge. The reasons stated were geopolitical and philosophical. But since we are talking about facts, it also is true that the Factbook went public in 1975 with lofty statements of purpose at a time whenCongress was revealing abusesby U.S. intelligence agencies, including the CIA.

"We share these facts with the people of all nations in the belief that knowledge of the truth underpins the functioning of free societies," the CIA itself explained in its pages.

The spy agency is not sharing them anymore.

On Feb. 4, the Trump administrationabruptly shutteredthis widely accepted account of humanity and its flags, nations, customs, militaries and borders. The CIA framed the move as one of progress for an agency whose core mission has changed.

A great wave of grief rose from Factbook fans. Many said they mourned an America that valued knowledge for its own sake. Some saw darker forces at work under a president whose administrationhas promoted— intimesof war and peace —"alternative facts."

"Stay curious," the CIA advised in its "fond farewell" to the Factbook.

And, it might have added: Good luck figuring outwhat's truefrom thewildandfrequentlyinaccurateworld of theinternetandartificial intelligence.

The Factbook's origin story

Decades before Google became an everyday verb, there was the Factbook.

Its origin story is rooted in the Japanese surprise attack on Pearl Harbor in 1941, a U.S. intelligence failure that inspired a more coordinated approach to gathering and organizing information on America's enemies. The Joint Army Navy Intelligence Studies was born, the country's first interdepartmental basic intelligence program. But by 1946, national security experts agreed that "the conduct of peace involves all countries, all human activities — not just the enemy and his war production," in the words of one, George S. Pettee.

The job of gathering basic intelligence on other countries was assigned to the newly minted CIA in 1947, according to the agency's website.

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The Cold War exposed the ongoing need for a one-stop source of basic intelligence — and an opportunity for what in 1971 became the unclassified Factbook. It was released to the public four years later.

In addition to becoming useful to students, it held geopolitical influence. The Factbook showed off American intelligence capabilities to the former Soviet Union and other enemies. Being included in it could confer legitimacy upon a nation or an opposition party. And it was ironic that an agency founded on the need to know and keep secrets was sharing so much data — called "basic intelligence" — with the public.

The Factbook also likely served as a boost to the CIA's public image and put distance between it and other intelligence agencies tarnished by congressional investigations. In 1975, U.S. Sen. Frank Church, D-Idaho, convened a panel that held more than 100 public hearings, many televised, of the most significant oversight of intelligence agencies since World War II.

In 1976, the Church Committee reported widespread abuse by the CIA, IRS, the National Security Agency and FBI, including the revelation of theCIA's "Family Jewels."That was aninternal accountof illegal CIA activities, such as spying on American activists and an assassination plot against Cuba's Fidel Castro.

Also in 1975, what would become the CIA World Factbook went public, ascending as a reliable research tool often recommended in class projects. There was never confirmation that the bad press inspired the wide release of the Factbook, but doing so around the same time fit the CIA's need to rehab its brand.

In 1981, the CIA renamed the publication The World Factbook, and in 1997, it leapt online. The CIA has described it as representing "a tremendous culmination of efforts from some of our country's brightest analytic minds."

The jolt of its Trump-era demise

News of the Factbook's end shocked more than just U.S. students and researchers. It was picked up by news outlets abroad. The story shot across social media, with Reddit users pointing each other to archived Factbooks and racing to set up and identify other sources of unbiased information that might suffice.

Isabel Altamirano, chemistry librarian assistant professor at Auburn University in Alabama, said the information is still out there, but "it'll be harder to find." University libraries, for example, offer similar resources to students, who get access through their tuition.

"It was so easy, because it was all in one place," she said in an interview, noting that on Feb. 4, when she saw the news, she rushed to delete the Factbook from a list of resources for her students in a business communications class.

Fundamentally, one analyst said, a Factbook assembled by a government agency with secret agendas and shadowy methods might never have been unbiased in the first place.

"The compilers aren't, nor can they be expected to be, neutral," said Binoy Kampmark, a professor of global, urban and social studies at Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology in Australia. Mourning its loss, he wrote in an email, would be "misplaced."

The Factbook, he added, might be better saved as a historical document. Its last publication on Feb. 4 is already outdated, according to an archived version: Under Iran, the country's head of government is still listed as Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

Khameneiwas reported killed March 1 in U.S. and Israeli strikes. And the world changed once again, this time without the Factbook to note it.

Eulogy for the CIA Factbook: The free standard for world facts, long an educational staple, is gone

If you attended school any time after the Nixon administration, then you likely beheld at some point theCIA World Factboo...
Famous hurricane forecast map gets a big makeover

After a two-year experimental run, an updated track forecast cone graphic moves into a starring role with theNational Hurricane Center this summer.

USA TODAY

The new graphic, to debut whenthe first tropical storm forms, is one of several changes the hurricane center is making forthe Atlantic season that starts June 1. Members of the hurricane center's staff sat down with USA TODAY at the National Hurricane Conference in Orlando to talk about the changes.

The goal is to continue improving communications about hazards and risk with the public and emergency managers, said Michael Brennan, director of the hurricane center.

Thewidely recognized five-day track graphic– often called the "cone of uncertainty" – had been used since 2002.But it was often misunderstood.

It showed only the likely path of the center of the storm and markings along coastlines where tropical storm and hurricane watches and warnings were in effect. It did not show the full range of high winds, rain and other impacts, including inland areas under watches and warnings. Revisions to the cone have been the subject of great debate and deliberation among the hurricane science community.

A woman prepares food over a bonfire in El Cobre, Santiago de Cuba, on November 17, 2025. Thousands of homes were destroyed or damaged after Hurricane Melissa hit the eastern region of Cuba, forcing residents to find their own ways to carry on with their lives. Hurricane Melissa passes over the island of Cuba in this satellite image from Oct. 29, 2025. Hurricane Melissa is seen moving over Cuba in a satellite image in October 2025. Waves batter the shoreline ahead of Hurricane Melissa's landfall, in Santiago de Cuba, Cuba, October 28, 2025. A man walks between fallen trees in the aftermath of Hurricane Melissa in Santiago, Cuba, October 29, 2025. Rescue workers and members of the Cuban military evacuate residents from their home on Oct. 31, 2025, after the Cauto River flooded due to Hurricane Melissa, in Rio Cauto, Granma Province, Cuba. REUTERS/Norlys Perez A man is evacuated from his home by emergency personnel after the Cauto River flooded due to Hurricane Melissa, in Rio Cauto, Granma Province, Cuba October 31, 2025. A man carries a dog through floodwater as they are rescued by emergency personnel after the Cauto River flooded due to Hurricane Melissa, in Rio Cauto, Granma Province, Cuba October 31, 2025. A woman is evacuated from her home by emergency personnel after the Cauto River flooded due to Hurricane Melissa, in Rio Cauto, Granma Province, Cuba October 31, 2025. A resident of El Cobre, in the province of Santiago de Cuba, walks past downed trees, power lines and destroyed houses following the passage of Hurricane Melissa, on October 29, 2025. A resident on horseback passes by downed trees, power lines, and destroyed houses after the passage of Hurricane Melissa in El Cobre, Santiago de Cuba province, Cuba on October 30, 2025. Residents recover their belongings after the passage of Hurricane Melissa in El Cobre, Santiago de Cuba province, Cuba on October 30, 2025. A man stands amid debris of a damaged house after the passage of Hurricane Melissa in Boca de Dos Rios village, Santiago de Cuba province, Cuba on October 30, 2025. Residents repair their homes destroyed days earlier by Hurricane Melissa in El Cobre, Santiago de Cuba, on November 17, 2025. Thousands of homes were destroyed or damaged after Hurricane Melissa hit the eastern region of Cuba, forcing residents to find their own ways to carry on with their lives.

Hurricane Melissa left a trail of damage during passage over Cuba

New cone graphic

The new graphic adds the inland tropical storm and hurricane watches and warnings in the continental United States, Hawaii, Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands, shading them in with bright colors. "That's to better convey the wind risk, and better convey that hazards can extend outside the cone," Brennan said.

Thenew graphic was unveiled two years agoas an experimental tool for public comment regarding its effectiveness at communicating storm risks, said Robbie Berg, the hurricane center's warning coordination meteorologist.

"In the first year, there were questions about the legend and colors we were using, so we fixed that," Berg said. After the second year, it seemed to be generally accepted, he said.

An example of the new version of the National Hurricane Center's forecast cone graphic that becomes operational this summer. It's shown for Hurricane Milton in 2024, and includes the areas covered by inland watches and warnings.

"Being able to provide watches and warnings inland from the coast is a more representative picture," he said. The new graphic will also be provided in an interactive version, where viewers will be able to zoom, pan and save the image, he said.

The goal is to be in a continual improvement process, Berg said. "We're not going to just make a change and then sit on it again for 10 to 20 years, we want to be constantly making updates and new changes."

Hurricane season storm names listed for 2026

Another new cone graphic will be waiting in the wings

Also launching this year is the hurricane center'slatest iteration of the cone graphic, another experimental version. The staff hopes it will do a better job of communicating risk and probability related to the storm's arrival by changing in two key ways.

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The old cone graphic and the graphic to be used this year are drawn using a set of concentric circles along the forecast track to illustrate where the center of the storm was expected to travel 2 out of 3 times, based on forecast errors over the previous five seasons.

"I don't think people really understand that well," Berg said. It was sometimes misunderstood as an indication of the storm's size, its impacts or as an absolute path for the center rather than a 67% probability.

The circles will change to ellipses in the experimental graphic, because their research has shown the flattened circles, or ovals, are more effective at illustrating potential forecast errors both along track and cross track. And it's based on a 90% probability, Berg said. That means a storm's center should move outside the ellipse only one out of every 10 times, making the cone a little larger, but lending higher forecast confidence that the center "will stay within the cone."

"We actually have higher errors in the along track direction, meaning it's harder for us to nail the speed of a storm relative to how much it might go right or left," he said. He compares it to using a GPS map to estimate your drive time on a trip. The digital map draws your path, and you generally stay along that path, maybe with a slight detour here or there, he said, but your arrival time can change a lot depending on traffic conditions.

Along a five-day forecast, if the forward speed is off by only 5 knots (5.7 mph), accumulated over 120 hours, that's a much larger displacement between when the storm was forecast to arrive and when it actually arrives, Berg said. Tests on the new project show "a much better representation of what the actual storm may do."

Hurricane Milton is used to compare the National Hurricane Center's current forecast track cone, with absolute errors shown in a dashed red line, and a new experimental cone that accounts for along- and cross-track errors in white shading. The red line is only for comparison and would not appear in the new graphic.

Communicating the risks

All of the products are getting "a lot better," said John Cangialosi, a senior hurricane specialist at the hurricane center. But impacts are always going to fall outside the "cone."

"The bottom line is we keep telling people you can't use this one (map) alone," Cangialosi said. "We need you to focus on the whole big picture."

That's been part of the motivation behind developing the storm surge watches and warnings across the Caribbean and Pacific, said Cody Fritz, the center's storm surge unit lead. They're rolling out the first storm surge watches and warnings, and peak surge forecasts for Hawaii this year.

People tend to "focus so much on the center of the track that they're not really acknowledging the hazards that are associated outside the track, in some cases hundreds of miles outside that track," he said.

The cone is like a Table of Contents, Berg said. "That's all it is. You don't get a full story just reading the table of contents. You have to actually look at other products to understand more about the risk."

Dinah Voyles Pulver, a national correspondent for USA TODAY, writes about violent weather, climate change and other news. Reach her at dpulver@usatoday.com or @dinahvp on Bluesky or X or dinahvp.77 on Signal.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Famous National Hurricane Center forecast track map gets a makeover

Famous hurricane forecast map gets a big makeover

After a two-year experimental run, an updated track forecast cone graphic moves into a starring role with theNational Hur...

 

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