Dries Van Noten Spring 2025 Men's Collection and Shoes, Photos
Stephen Garner
·3-min read
Dries Van Noten presented his final spring/summer 2025 men’s collection at Paris Fashion Week on Saturday. See all the looks and shoes from the runway here, in photos.
BEIJING (Reuters) -China's shipbuilders on Saturday blasted as "short-sighted" U.S. port fees announced by President Donald Trump's administration on China-linked ships, a measure aimed at the nation's shipbuilding industry. Trump signed an order on Wednesday aimed at reviving U.S. shipbuilding and reducing China's grip on the global shipping industry. The spat over ocean shipping, which conveys 80% of global trade, is the latest conflict in an intensifying trade war between China and the U.S. that has pushed levies on each other's imports beyond 100%.
“Oh we’re going to make a deal," Trump said from the White House in response to a reporter's question about picking up the phone to call China's President Xi Jinping. "I think we are going to make a very good deal with China." Earlier on Thursday, China's commerce ministry urged the United States to stop putting "extreme pressure" on the world's second-largest economy and demanded respect in any trade talks, but the two sides remained at an impasse over who should start those talks.
Marco Rubio's comments are the strongest indication yet of Washington's apparent growing frustration at the lack of progress in peace talks. It's been two months since Donald Trump initiated negotiations, with a call to Vladimir Putin, in the hope of bringing the conflict to a swift conclusion. There was a much-touted 30-day ceasefire covering strikes on energy infrastructure, but it never formally began.
Harvard has pointed out that letter was signed by top officials who previously promised to send it, and was printed on official letterhead The post Trump Officials Tried to Claim Harvard Letter Was Sent by Mistake After University Publicly Rejected Demands appeared first on TheWrap.
Lisa Anderson, a U.S.-born physician from Connecticut, said she received an email from the Department of Homeland Security telling her to leave the country.
President Donald Trump has repeatedly touted what he calls the return of manufacturing to the United States, hailing companies that have vowed to pour large amounts of money into making everything from computer chips to cars in America.
President Trump turned up the pressure on Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell again on Thursday, saying in a social media post that he should lower interest rates and that "Powell’s termination cannot come fast enough."