Paris Hilton Shares Big '80s Hair Throwback Photos in Birthday Post for Mom

Famous socialiteParis Hiltonrecently wished her momKathy Hiltonahappy birthdayon Instagram, and the post is chalk full of big wonderful '80s hair.

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Anyone else remember a time when bigger truly was better when it came to hair and extra voluminous bangs? Ever find yourself wistful for the smell of hotboxing in a bathroom full of Aqua Net? Yeah, those were some times.

Whether she meant to or not, Paris Hilton gets us craving some '80s while she celebrates her mom Kathy's 67thbirthdayand shares a bunch of fun old photos. Paris andsisterNicky Hiltonwere both born in the early '80s, so in the family photos when the girls are little, Mama Kathy is rocking some very bodacious hair.

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Related: Christina Applegate Divulges Two Hollywood A-Listers Who Sacrificed Their Salaries to Boost Hers

In the celebratory post, Paris writes: "Happy Birthday to the most incredible mom and the heart of our family@KathyHilton💖✨🎂."

She showsgratitudefor Kathy's dedication as her mom, as well as in the new role she's taken on asgrandmotherto Paris's two kids: sonPhoenix Barron, who's 3, and daughterLondon Marilyn, who is 2. "You have the kindest heart and the most beautiful spirit," Paris continues, "and our family is so lucky to have you at the center of it all. Love you so much Mom. Today we celebrate you 💖✨🎉"Now do yourself a favor click on through the photos to enjoy your '80s throwback (the best hair starts around slide #9):

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This story was originally published byParadeon Mar 14, 2026, where it first appeared in theNewssection. Add Parade as aPreferred Source by clicking here.

Paris Hilton Shares Big '80s Hair Throwback Photos in Birthday Post for Mom

Famous socialiteParis Hiltonrecently wished her momKathy Hiltonahappy birthdayon Instagram, and the post is chalk full of...
NYT 'Connections' Hints, Clues and Answers Today, Saturday, March 14, 2026

There's nothing quite as exhilarating as the feeling of completing the daily New York TimesWordle,Strands,Mini CrosswordandConnections Sports Editionword games in one fell swoop. But sometimes that can be easier said than done. If you need help with today'sConnectionspuzzle, keep reading.

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Spoilers ahead! We've warned you. We mean it. Read no further until youreallywant some clues or you've completely given up and want the answers ASAP. Get ready for all of today'sNYT 'Connections' hints and answers for#1007 onSaturday, March 14, 2026.

Today's NYT Connections puzzle for Saturday, March 14, 2026 / New York TimesThe New York Times

If you've been having trouble with any of theconnections or wordsin Saturday's puzzle, you're not alone, and these hints should definitely help you out. Plus, I'll reveal the answers further down.

Related:The 26 Funniest NYT Connections Game Memes You'll Appreciate if You Do This Daily Word Puzzle

Hints About Today's NYT Connections Categories on Saturday, March 14

  1. In a state of increased suggestibility.

  2. Starting with 1+1

  3. He's on the case!

  4. Queens of the kingdom.

Related:300 Trivia Questions and Answers to Jumpstart Your Fun Game Night

Ready for the answers? Scroll below this image (the image that represents your very appreciatedpatience!).

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Today's Connections Game Answers for Saturday, March 14:

1.HYPNOTIC STATE:DREAM, HAZE, SPELL, TRANCE2.STARTING WITH PREFIXES MEANING "TWO":BINARY, DIOXIDE, DUOLINGO, TWILIGHT3. FICTIONAL INSPECTORS:CLOUSEAU, GADGET, JAVERT, MORSE4.ENDING IN FEMALE ANIMALS:HOOTENANNY, LICHEN, MOSCOW, NIGHTMARE

How'd you do?

Up Next:-15 Fun Games Like Connections to Play Every Day-Hints, Clues and Answers to the NYT's 'Mini Crossword' Puzzle

Did You Miss a Few Days?Let's Catch You Up With Recent Connections Answers

Related: This Trendy New Grocery Find Is the Flavorful Upgrade Your Pantry Is Missing

This story was originally published byParadeon Mar 14, 2026, where it first appeared in theLifesection. Add Parade as aPreferred Source by clicking here.

NYT ‘Connections’ Hints, Clues and Answers Today, Saturday, March 14, 2026

There's nothing quite as exhilarating as the feeling of completing the daily New York TimesWordle,Strands,Mini Crossw...
Out of the frying pan? Noma's Rene Redzepi resigns, and fine dining confronts 'brigade' culture

LONDON (AP) — Chef Gordon Ramsay yells at people. His mentor was known for throwing pans and plates. That chef, London's Marco Pierre White, titled his own memoir "The Devil in the Kitchen" — in part for the punishments he meted out to his chefs.

Associated Press Noma's chef René Redzepi prepares a vegetarian burger in a restaurant, in Copenhagen, Nov. 24, 2024. (Soeren Bidstrup/Ritzau Scanpix via AP) FILE - Gordon Ramsay arrives at the FOX winter junket on Wednesday, Dec. 13, 2023, in Los Angeles. (Photo by Richard Shotwell/Invision/AP, File) FILE - Jeremy Allen White arrives at the premiere of FILE - Danish chef René Redzepi, in London, April 29, 2013. (AP Photo/Lefteris Pitarakis, File) Noma's chef René Redzepi smells a citrus fruit in Copenhagen, Nov. 24, 2024. (Soeren Bidstrup/Ritzau Scanpix via AP)

Denmark Noma Chef

"If you don't fear the boss, you'll take shortcuts, you'll turn up late," White wrote, saying his kitchen staff at Harveys accepted that. "They were all pain junkies, they had to be. They couldn't get enough of the bollockings."

The public downfallthis week of Denmark'sRene Redzepi, arguably the world's top chef, has forced a reckoning in real time over when "brigade de cuisine" becomes abuse and what should happen to perpetrators who direct the creation of edible art.

At issue is whether time is up on the storied bullying and intimidation of fine dining kitchen culture, brought to the masses through pop culture by celebrity chef reality shows and high-end TV like "The Bear." Lofty, pricey matters like leadership style and legal liability are suddenly at the center of a relatively small industry known for narrow profit margins, not HR departments or training.

"The resources aren't there for self-policing," said Robin Burrow, associate professor of organization studies at the University of York. "The general feeling, though, is that things are so tough even for very good chefs that this kind of culture ends up being inevitable."

Kitchen magician, toxic chef

Redzepi, a Danish knight and the founder of Noma and innovative "New Nordic" cuisine, stepped down Thursday afterThe New York Times reportedthat dozens of former employees had shared their accounts of abuse and assault between 2009 and 2017 at theCopenhagen landmark. Redzepi had been dogged for years by reports of mistreating his staff and employing unpaid interns at Noma, which received three Michelin stars and was ranked first onthe World's 50 Best Restaurants Listfive times.

The allegations overshadowed Noma's $1,500-a-head pop-up restaurant in Los Angeles. Sponsors pulled their funding for the residency, which opened on Wednesday to a small gathering of protesters. Redzepi announced his resignation on Instagram with a tearful video soon after. "An apology is not enough," he said. "I take responsibility for my own actions."

Former employees said Redzepi has never been held accountable for his conduct, which included punching members of the staff, jabbing them with kitchen tools and threatening to get them blacklisted from restaurants or have their families deported.

Jason Ignacio White, a former head of Noma's fermentation lab, collected anonymous testimonies of alleged abuse at the restaurant and posted them to his Instagram page. The accounts have been viewed millions of times.

"Noma destroyed my passion for the industry," one post said. "I struggled with intense anxiety, bad enough to give me panic attacks in the middle of the night. The trauma, abuse and idea that nothing would ever change all led me to walk away from the career."

The kitchen brigade system is entrenched

The process at the heart of restaurants worldwide is the "brigade de cuisine," a strict organization of the kitchen developed around the turn of the 20th century by French chef Georges Auguste Escoffier, who based it on his own military experience.

Under its hierarchy, every member of the staff has a specialty — from the "chief" to the sauce-maker, the roast cook, the grill cook and the fish cook. Their choreography and their communications — "Hand!" and "Yes, chef!" — are designed for speed, consistency and cleanliness.

Even so, kitchen atmospheres have long been filled with chaos and intensity. Escoffier himself wrote that his first chef believed it was impossible to govern a kitchen "without a shower of slaps."

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George Orwell, the essayist and author of the dystopian classic "1984," once described the restaurant kitchen of his time as a place where one person in the hierarchy yelled at his subordinate, who yelled at someone below him and so on. Weeping was not unusual. As a plongeur (dishwasher), Orwell ranked at the bottom.

"A plongeur is one of the slaves of the modem world," he wrote in "Down and Out in Paris and London," published in 1933. "He is no freer than if he were bought and sold."

It's a place 'where the rules don't apply'

In the modern era, professional kitchens are thought to be some of the toughest places to work thanks to a recipe of long hours, close quarters, strict hierarchies, grueling physical conditions and relentless pressure.

The rise of the chef as an auteur during the 1970s with an obsession with Michelin-star-level excellence only accelerated the poor behavior as prices and egos rose.

In his 2006 memoir, White described his kitchen at Harveys in London as "my theatre of cruelty" and boasted of giving his chefs "a 10-second throttle."Anthony Bourdain'smemoir "Kitchen Confidential" helped romanticize that testosterone-fueled vision, describing kitchens filled with "heated argument, hypermacho posturing and drunken ranting."

Personal accounts and research suggest there's painful truth behind the romanticized branding. Cardiff University conducted interviews with 47 elite chefs for a 2021 study and found that the isolation of commercial kitchens can produce a sort of "geography of deviance" that create "feelings of invisibility, alienation and detachment" in lower-ranking employees. It also found that chef conduct can make a kitchen "an instrument of social withdrawal and a symbol of deviance around which the community pivots."

Open kitchens in part were designed to merge the two spaces, kitchens and dining rooms. Several employees told The Times that when Redzepi wanted to discipline them in the open kitchen but there were customers in the dining room, he would crouch under the counters and jab them in the legs with his fingers or a nearby utensil.

Many chefs' proteges stay silent because they don't want to risk the opportunity to learn from the best — or the potential to launch high-flying culinary careers of their own. That was the case in the fictional, wildly popular show "The Bear," in which the main character, Carmy Berzatto, endured open and flagrant abuse so that he can study under one of the world's greatest chefs.

The downfall of a 'visionary'

Noma — a contraction of the Danish words for Nordisk and Mad, meaning Nordic and food — opened in 2003 dedicated to "a simple desire to rediscover wild local ingredients by foraging and to follow the seasons." By the time Redzepi stepped down, he had become so prominent in the culinary world that Noma played a role in "The Bear" as the training ground for two main characters. Redzepi himself appeared on the series in a cameo.

It wasn't his first time on camera. He'd also been seen yelling at cooks in the 2008 documentary "Noma at Boiling Point," and has made several public apologies. He acknowledged in a 2015essay,being "a bully for a large part of my career." He said he's "yelled and pushed people. I've been a terrible boss at times."

And — today's mass-culture excitement around intense kitchen behavior notwithstanding — he seemed to recognize even then that the old way alienated young, talented workers and jeopardized the future of cuisine.

"The only way we will be able to reap the promise of the present is by confronting the unpleasant legacies of our past," Redzepi said, "and collectively forging a new path forward."

Associated Press Writer Mark Kennedy contributed from New York.

Out of the frying pan? Noma’s Rene Redzepi resigns, and fine dining confronts 'brigade' culture

LONDON (AP) — Chef Gordon Ramsay yells at people. His mentor was known for throwing pans and plates. That chef, London...
What we know on the 15th day of the US and Israel's war with Iran

The United States launched what it said weremilitary strikeson an Iranian island critical to the country's economy and oil exports Friday night, an attack that analysts warned raises the stakes as the US-Israel war entered its third week.

CNN Smoke from an explosion rises behind demonstrators attending the annual anti-Israeli Quds Day, or Jerusalem Day, rally in support of Palestinians in Tehran, Iran, on Friday. - Mohammad Mahdi Dehghani/Fars News Agency/AP

The strikes on Kharg Island, which a US official said avoided hitting vital oil infrastructure, comes as the economic fallout over the effective closure of the Strait of Hormuz continues to grow and the Pentagonannounced it is deployinga rapid response marine unit to the Middle East.

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Here's what to know on day 15.

A satellite image shows Iran's Kharg Island on March 11th, prior to US strikes on the island. - Airbus

What are the main headlines?

  • Kharg Island: US President Donald Trump said the US bombed "every military target" on the island, and threatened to attack its oil infrastructure if Iran continues blocking ships from the Strait of Hormuz. Kharg Island is a five-mile stretch of land in the Persian Gulf that handles roughly 90% of Iran's crude exports. A US military official told CNN the strikes were "large-scale" and targeted naval mine storage facilities, missile storage bunkers and other military infrastructure.

  • Raising the stakes: Iran's ⁠Parliament Speaker Mohammad Baqer Qalibaf had earlier warned that the country would "abandon all restraint" if there is any US aggression against Iranian islands. A retired US army officer told CNN the Kharg Island strikes could ultimately send oil prices "out of control."

  • Strait of Hormuz: Trump said Friday he believes US Navy escorts for tankers through the critical waterway will happen "soon." Separately, a senior Iranian official told CNN that Tehran is considering allowing some vessels to pass through the strait, provided the cargo is traded in Chinese yuan.

  • Fuel crisis: Global oil prices settled at their highest level on Friday since July 2022 as anxiety about the effective closure of the strait continued across global markets. Countries are planning to dip into oil reserves as they grapple with the crisis.

  • Marines heading to region: The Pentagon is deploying a Marine Expeditionary Unit to the Middle East, a rapid response unit that typically comprises around 2,500 Marines and sailors, officials told CNN. It's not yet clear what the MEU will be used for or where exactly it will be deployed.

Rescue workers search for survivors in the rubble after a strike in southern Tehran, Iran, on Friday. - Sajjad Safari/AP

What's happening in the region?

  • Strikes on Iran: Israel says it continued to strike Iran Friday night as the death toll from the war continues to rise. US and Israeli strikes on Iran have killed at least 1,300 people, the Iranian ambassador to the United Nations said. Israel said its targets ranged from Iranian security checkpoints in Tehran to weapons storage facilities and government offices.

  • Damage in Israel: Falling debris from Iranian weapons caused blazes in two suburbs of Tel Aviv, Israeli officials said Friday.

  • Grief in Lebanon: Israeli strikes killed nine people from the same family in Lebanon's south, including four children. "Everyone here knows what my girls meant to me," the children's father told CNN. Israel on Friday expanded its operations targeting the Iran-backed militia Hezbollah, including in the capital Beirut.

  • Deadly plane crash: The US military said all six service members aboard a refueling aircraft were killed when it crashed Thursday in Iraq. The US said the incident was "not due to hostile fire," but an Iranian proxy group claimed responsibility. An Air Force official later told CNN that the aircraft was not equipped with ejection systems or parachutes to evacuate its occupants mid-air.

  • Where is the supreme leader? The US government is offering a reward of up to $10 million for information on key Iranian leaders, including Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei. US Vice President JD Vance said Khamenei is "hurt" but "we don't know exactly how bad." While Khamenei offered a message through Iranian state media Thursday, he didn't appear on video or audio. CNN previously reported that Khamenei was wounded on the first day of the war.

  • Toxic air: CNN analysis of satellite imagery and air quality data shows Israeli strikes at fuel facilities across Tehran last weekend spiked pollution levels, ignited fires and caused oil spills.

For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

What we know on the 15th day of the US and Israel’s war with Iran

The United States launched what it said weremilitary strikeson an Iranian island critical to the country's economy an...
What to know about Kharg Island, the tiny coral outcrop at the heart of Iran's oil industry

During the first two weeks of the latest war in the Middle East, as US and Israeli strikes rained down on military and energy facilities across Iran, one site went conspicuously untouched.

CNN A general view of the Port of Kharg Island Oil Terminal, 25 kilometers from the Iranian coast in the Persian Gulf and 483 kilometers northwest of the Strait of Hormuz, in Iran on March 12, 2017. - Fatemeh Bahrami/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images

Despite its tiny size,Kharg Islandis an economic lifeline for Iran, handling roughly 90% of the country's crude exports – meaning any assault on it risks major escalation.

But on Friday the UShit military facilitieson the island. Sites related to the oil trade were not hit, according to US officials and Iranian state media. But Trump has threatened to strike those too, if Iran continues blocking ships from traversing the Strait of Hormuz.

Here's what to know about this crucial spigot in Iran's oil exports operation.

Why is the island so important?

Kharg Island is a coral outcrop around a third of the size of Manhattan just 25 kilometers (15 miles) off Iran's coast, in the Persian Gulf.

Almost every day, millions of barrels of crude oil gush from Iran's major fields – including Ahvaz, Marun and Gachsaran – through pipelines to the island, known among Iranians as the "Forbidden Island" due to tight military controls.

Its long jetties, jutting into waters deep enough to accommodate oil supertankers, make the island a critical site for oil distribution. It processes 90% of Iran's crude exports.

The island has long been key to Iran's economy. ACIA document from 1984said the facilities are "the most vital in Iran's oil system, and their continued operation is essential to Iran's economic well-being." Israeli opposition leader Yair Lapidrecently saidthat destroying the terminal would "cripple Iran's economy and topple the regime."

Iran supplies about 4.5% of global oil, pumping 3.3 million barrels of crude and 1.3 million barrels of condensate and other liquids daily, according to Reuters.

Satellite image shows Iran's Kharg Island on March 11th, prior to US strikes on the island. - Airbus

And the island has been loading tankers "non-stop since the war broke out," according to TankerTrackers.com, which uses satellite imagery, shore photography and data to track crude oil shipments.

In the weeks leading up to the US-Israeli strikes on Iran, exports from Kharg were ramped up to near-record levels, US investment bank JP Morgan said in a note reported by Reuters.

Storage capacity on Kharg is estimated at roughly 30 million barrels and, according to global trade analyst Kpler, about 18 million barrels of crude are currently stored there, Reuters reported.

What happened to Kharg?

Trump announced Friday that the US military conducted what he called "one of the most powerful bombing raids in the history of the Middle East," wiping out military assets on Kharg Island.

Video posted to Truth Social by Trump and geolocated by CNN showed US strikes on Kharg's airport facilities and runway.

A US military official told CNN the strikes were "large-scale" but avoided hitting the island's oil infrastructure. Targets included naval mine storage facilities, missile storage bunkers and other military infrastructure, the official added.

Iran said more than 15 explosions were reported on the island but no oil infrastructure was damaged, according to state-affiliated Fars news agency.

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Trump, however, threatened to attack the island's oil assets if Iran continues blocking ships from the Strait of Hormuz.

What impact would strikes have on the war and global oil prices?

Iran has said any attack on its oil and energy infrastructure will lead to retaliatory strikes on facilities in the region owned by US-friendly oil companies, Iranian state media reported, citing Tehran's military command headquarters.

The US strikes have raised the stakes in the war, a retired army official told CNN.

"It's gone simply from a 'take out the military, take out the regime' but now we're trying to take out the economic lifeblood of this country, potentially," former US Army Brig-Gen. Mark Kimmitt said.

Kimmitt said the US is holding the island "hostage" to ensure that Iran allows ships through the Strait of Hormuz, whose closure has already sent crude oil prices soaring.

If that oil infrastructure is targeted, Kimmitt said, "it is clear that Iran is going to attack the rest of the infrastructure in the Middle East."

"And at that point, the prices of oil will just go out of control," he added.

If Kharg's oil facilities were attacked, it could take Iran months, if not more than a year, to rebuild, Muyu Xu, senior crude oil analyst at Kpler told CNN, adding that as the main buyer of Iranian oil, China would likely see the biggest impact.

"They (Iran) are still facing western sanctions, they can't really secure enough funds and also technology and expertise, it would be difficult for them to rebuild," Xu added.

What could happen next?

Iran could escalate even further by making good on its threat to hit oil infrastructure around the region, analysts said. It has already struck oil storage tanks in US allies Oman and Bahrain, and has targeted oil tankers and cargo vessels in the Persian Gulf.

The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps has alsothreatened to setthe region's oil and gas infrastructure "on fire" if Iranian energy sites are attacked.

The Kharg strikes came as the US announced it would send a rapid response marine unit of about 2,500 Marines and sailors to the Middle East. Former US Army Brig-Gen. Kimmitt broached the possibility of that force occupying Kharg Island.

It's not yet clear what the MEU will be used for or where exactly it will be deployed. But these units have traditionally been used for missions like large-scale evacuations and amphibious operations that require ship-to-shore movements, including raids and assaults.

Experts have also argued that attempting to capture or attack Kharg Island would require a significant number of ground troops — something the Trump administration has so far been reluctant to call in.

CNN's Kit Maher, Natasha Bertrand, Jeremy Diamond, Alayna Treene, Ross Adkin, and Isaac Yee contributed reporting.

For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

What to know about Kharg Island, the tiny coral outcrop at the heart of Iran’s oil industry

During the first two weeks of the latest war in the Middle East, as US and Israeli strikes rained down on military and en...
War has already displaced nearly a million Lebanese, and aid groups warn of a humanitarian crisis

BEIRUT (AP) — Fatima Nazha slept on the street for two days after she and her family fled their home in Beirut's southern suburbs following an Israeli mass evacuation order.

Associated Press Displaced people fleeing Israeli airstrikes in southern Lebanon and Dahiyeh, Beirut's southern suburbs, settle at the Bir Hassan Technical Institute, which has been turned into a shelter, in Beirut, Lebanon, Wednesday, March 11, 2026. (AP Photo/Bilal Hussein) Displaced children run between tents set up inside the Camille Chamoun Sports City Stadium, which has been turned into a shelter for people displaced by Israeli airstrikes in southern Lebanon and Dahiyeh, Beirut's southern suburbs, in Beirut, Lebanon, Tuesday, March 10, 2026. (AP Photo/Hassan Ammar) An elderly displaced woman who fled Israeli airstrikes with her family in southern Lebanon sits at the Bir Hassan Technical Institute, which has been turned into a shelter, in Beirut, Lebanon, Wednesday, March 11, 2026. (AP Photo/Bilal Hussein) A displaced woman who fled Israeli airstrikes in southern Lebanon sleeps on the ground at the Bir Hassan Technical Institute, which has been turned into a shelter, in Beirut, Lebanon, Wednesday, March 11, 2026. (AP Photo/Bilal Hussein) A displaced migrant woman, who among many others who fled Israeli strikes in southern and eastern Lebanon and Beirut's southern suburbs, sits with her children on mattresses at Saint Joseph Church, which has been turned into a shelter for displaced migrants, mostly from African nations, in Beirut, Wednesday, March 11, 2026. (AP Photo/Hussein Malla)

Lebanon Israel Iran

All of the schools the government turned into shelters were full, and the family couldn't afford a hotel or an apartment, so she and her husband eventually moved into a tentin the country's biggest stadiumwhile their kids and grandchildren found shelter near the southern coastal city of Sidon.

In just 10 days, more than 800,000 people in Lebanon have been displaced by war, just over a year since the last conflict uprooted over a million Lebanese from their homes. That's one in every seven people in the tiny country, according to humanitarian organization the Norwegian Refugee Council. Many don't have a place to stay, and the cash-strapped government has only been able to accommodate roughly 120,000 people as it scrambles to open shelters and bring in more supplies.

Nazha, who uses a wheelchair, said being forced from her home has been far more difficult this time than when Israel and Hezbollahwere last at warmore than a year ago. The strikes targeting theIran-backed militant grouphave been more intense and unpredictable, and Israel's evacuation order came abruptly, leaving her unable to gather all her belongings.

"The strikes used to target a specific area, but now they're hitting all the areas," she said, taking a drag off her cigarette. Lebanon's Health Ministry said Friday that more than 700 people, including 103 children, have died in the war.

Divisions simmer in Lebanon

Israel ramped up its strikes on its northern neighbor after Hezbollah fired several rockets into Israel following the killing ofIran's Supreme Leader Ali Khameneiat the start of the war.

Most Lebanese were hoping Hezbollah wouldn't respond to the attack on Iran, as the militant group's support for another Iran-backed group, Hamas, in 2023 led to Israeli attacks on Hezbollah in Lebanon. Resentment toward Hezbollah and its backershas surged in Lebanon, as internal tensions and divisions in the deeply divided country continue to simmer.

Fearing becoming a target, landlords have been hiking apartment rents to dissuade new tenants. Hotels, meanwhile, have been vetting guests more strictly sinceIsrael struck two hotel rooms, saying it was targetingIranian Revolutionary Guardmembers who were operating in Beirut.

Some who don't have family and friends to stay with or can't afford an apartment or a hotel room have been sleeping on the streets or in their cars around central Beirut, trading comfort for safety. That sense of safety was shattered, though, afteran overnight Israeli strikekilled at least eight people and wounded more than 30 others in the capital's Ramlet el-Bayda neighborhood, where many displaced people pitched tents by the sea or slept on mattresses on the boardwalk.

Humanitarian groups, saddled by years of underfunding, are struggling to keep up. They warn ofa humanitarian crisis.

"The needs are escalating much faster than our capacity to respond," Mathieu Luciano, the head of the International Organization for Migration in Lebanon, said during a recent press briefing.

No time to prepare

The government, meanwhile, is using Lebanon's largest sports stadium as a makeshift shelter, where Nazha, her husband and more than 800 other people have been sleeping in the semiopen corridors under the stands. It has toilets and sinks, but no showers and only sporadic electricity.

"It's not enough that they bring us food. … A tin of sardines or a loaf of bread or a gallon of water, that's not enough," Nazha said Thursday from her foldout bed.

In the parking lot of the stadium where Lebanon's national soccer team regularly plays in peacetime, children played a pickup game as an Israeli drone flew overhead, recognizable by its whirring. From there, one can see and hear the bombs that have been exploding daily in nearby neighborhoods.

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Naji Hammoud, who oversees sporting facilities for the Lebanese Youth and Sports Ministry, said he didn't expect to have to take on such a heavy responsibility.

"It's a race against time," Hammoud said as aid workers and volunteers scrambled to pitch tents.

More than a million people were displaced in the last war, but that was toward the end of it after a year of limited fighting that gradually escalated. This time, what took months took days.

Hezbollah's initial rocket attack followed by Israel's swift bombardments overnight rattled Lebanon and the mass evacuation notices caught people off-guard. Israel first called on dozens of villages south of the Litani River to flee north. It later warned residents to evacuate Dahiyeh, an area of predominantly Shiitesuburbs on Beirut's southern edgethat is one of the country's most densely populated places.

All of the main roads leading to the capital from southern Lebanon were gridlocked as people scrambled to find somewhere safe to stay.

"We were on the road for two days until we found this place here that accepted us," said Seganish Gogamo, a worker from Ethiopia who fled the southern city of Nabatieh and found shelter in a Beirut church hosting migrant workers from Asia and Africa. She fled in the middle of the night after intense airstrikes.

Uncertainty abounds

There is no end in sight to the fighting, as some 100,000Israeli troops have amassedalong the U.N.-mandated Blue Line which divides the two countries in an anticipated ground invasion. Many fear the Israel-Hezbollah conflict could continue beyond the Iran war.

Joe Sayyah was among dozens of residents who remained in their border village, Alma al-Shaab, during the first few days of the war, hoping they wouldn't have to leave. It's a Christian village, and Israel has mostly targeted Shiite communities where Hezbollah operates.

Sayyah and others appealed to the Vatican and the U.S., describing themselves as bystanders in the conflict, insisting there was no military presence or activity among them. They also spent days sheltering in a church.

But when his friend was killed in an Israeli drone strike while watering his plants, they knew it was time to leave. He and the others rang the church bell one last time before they left for the capital in a convoy escorted by United Nations peacekeepers.

Afterarriving at a churchin the northern outskirts of Beirut to hold a funeral Mass for his friend, Sayyah said the sense of relief that came with reaching somewhere safe was quickly replaced by the grim realization that this war could be different from the last.

"This time around, there's a huge possibility we may not be able to go back to our village," he said.

Associated Press reporters Jamey Keaten in Geneva and Fadi Tawil in Beirut contributed to this story.

War has already displaced nearly a million Lebanese, and aid groups warn of a humanitarian crisis

BEIRUT (AP) — Fatima Nazha slept on the street for two days after she and her family fled their home in Beirut's sout...
Vanderbilt beats rival Tennessee for 2nd time in week's span

NASHVILLE -- Vanderbilt's Duke Miles scored 30 points and Tyler Tanner added 19, leading the 22nd-ranked Commodores to a 75-68 win over No. 25 Tennessee in a Southeastern Conference tournament quarterfinal matchup on Friday.

Field Level Media

Both guards grabbed six rebounds, while Miles added five assists and three steals and Tanner had four assists.

Miles was 11 of 14 from the floor and made 4 of 5 3-pointers for the fourth-seeded Commodores (25-7), who beat their in-state rivals for the second time in seven days to advance to face top seed Florida on Saturday.

Vanderbilt went through a 6:36 field-goal drought late in the game but was helped by being in the bonus with 9:21 left. The Commodores shot 84.6% from the foul line (22 of 26) and made 16 of 18 (88.9%) in the second half.

Ja'Kobi Gillespie paced No. 5 seed Tennessee (22-11) with 21 points and four assists, while Nate Ament and J.P. Estrella added 12 points each.

Ament, who scored 27 against Auburn on Thursday in his return from a two-game absence due to a leg injury, grabbed 11 rebounds but was 1 of 13 from the field.

Tennessee kept it close thanks to a 46-34 rebounding edge, including 23 offensive boards it turned into 24 second-chance points.

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Gillespie hit back-to-back 3-pointers to give the Volunteers a 45-38 lead with 14:51 left, the biggest for either team to that point.

Miles then took over the game for a dizzying spell that spanned 3:03 and included a pair of threes, a coast-to-coast fastbreak layup, a steal and a fastbreak assist to Tanner for his layup and subsequent free throw, a rebound and fastbreak assist to Chandler Bing for his three-point play and a pair of free throws in the midst of all that.

At the end of it all, that put Vanderbilt up 53-48 with 11:21 left.

Neither team led by four during a grind-it-out first half that ended tied at 31.

The Commodores missed their first nine 3-pointers until Miles canned one to give Vandy an 18-16 lead, its biggest of the first half.

Ament scored just one point in 14 first-half minutes for the Volunteers, missing all five field-goal attempts.

Vanderbilt, which also took a road game over Tennessee on Saturday, is 2-1 against its in-state rival this season.

--Chris Lee, Field Level Media

Vanderbilt beats rival Tennessee for 2nd time in week's span

NASHVILLE -- Vanderbilt's Duke Miles scored 30 points and Tyler Tanner added 19, leading the 22nd-ranked Commodore...

 

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