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Judge gives ‘green light’ to controversial New York law and more top headlines

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Good morning and welcome to Fox News’ morning newsletter, Fox News First. And here’s what you need to know to start your day …

TOP 3

1. Judge gives ‘green light’ to controversial New York law

2. Lawyer wins after years-long HOA fight over Christmas display

3. Family texts surface after Carnival cruise ship death

MAJOR HEADLINES

OPEN DOOR – Bukele challenges Hillary Clinton to take El Salvador’s entire prison population. Continue reading …

FIRING BACK – Harris pushes back on criticism of signature laughter, suggesting sexism is to blame. Continue reading …

SYSTEM FAIL – Repeat offender charged after another random attack leaves woman blind. Continue reading …

ARCTIC TENSION – Trump’s Greenland envoy pushes back on ‘conquest’ fears as Danish leaders fume. Continue reading …

END OF A CHAPTER – One of golf’s biggest stars to leave PGA for LIV ends tenure with Saudi-backed league. Continue reading …

POLITICS

PRO-LIFE VICTORY – DOJ walks back Biden-era abortion policy, bars VA from funding procedures. Continue reading …

PUSHING BACK – Trump admin sues Illinois Gov. Pritzker over laws shielding migrants from courthouse arrests. Continue reading …

FROM THE BENCH – Supreme Court rules on legality of Trump National Guard deployment to Illinois. Continue reading …

PRICE GAP – Conservative states see lower inflation than liberal ones nationwide, White House data shows. Continue reading …

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MEDIA

RISKY REWARD – Logan Paul drops $5.3M on a Pokémon card, tells young investors to ditch the stock market. Continue reading …

AGREE TO DISAGREE – Maury Povich breaks with Connie Chung over new CBS News leadership. Continue reading …

‘SAD REALITY’ – Jasmine Crockett claims allies have expressed concern for her safety while running for Senate. Continue reading …

PLOT THICKENS – CBS didn’t include White House statement about Angel Parents in CECOT segment on ‘60 Minutes.’ Continue reading …

OPINION

TOMMY BEHNKE – I finally watched ‘It’s a Wonderful Life’ and my mom was right about one important thing. Continue reading …

BISHOP ROBERT BARRON – Bible’s ‘forgotten’ Christmas account shows cosmic battle at Christ’s birth. Continue reading …

 

IN OTHER NEWS

INSIDE TRACK – Biff Poggi emerges as Michigan football coach candidate after shocking exit. Continue reading …

CROWN SHAKE-UP – Prince William plots to axe royal Christmas ritual for Middleton-style ‘chaos.’ Continue reading …

AMERICAN CULTURE QUIZ – Test yourself on TV treasures, weather wonders and more. Take the quiz here …

ON FIELD JABS – Aaron Rodgers hilariously trash talks star defender in mic’d up moment. Continue reading …

‘SUBSTITUTE SAUCE’ – Hooters Inc. CEO reveals past mistakes and new decisions. See video …

 

WATCH

SEN MARKWAYNE MULLIN – The only people who think this isn’t a good idea are ‘deranged’ Dems. See video …

TYRUS – We already have been ‘unburdened by what has been’. See video …

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Tune in to see Martin Scorsese’s groundbreaking series that reimagines the lives of the saints through a contemporary lens. Check it out …
 

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Rome will charge foreign visitors a $2.35 Trevi Fountain fee starting in 2026

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Visiting an 18th-century fountain in Rome will start costing you more than the coin you toss in the water.

Beginning in the New Year — on Feb. 1, 2026, to be exact — foreign visitors will have to pay about $2.35 (€2) to visit the Trevi Fountain.

The Eternal City introduced a new tariff system for its museums and monuments on Dec. 18.

AMERICANS MUST PAY HIGHER FEE FOR A TICKET TO THE WORLD’S MOST VISITED MUSEUM 

“The introduction of the access tariff to the Trevi Fountain reservoir derives from the experimentation started during maintenance work completed in December 2024,” the city’s website says.

It became “possible to collect fundamental data on inflows and to test new ways of use to combat overcrowding and protect the monument,” the announcement continued.

Rome is introducing a $2.35 entry fee for foreign tourists visiting the Trevi Fountain starting in February 2026. (Bloomberg via Getty Images; Ashley J. DiMella/Fox News Digital)

The historic fountain draws about 30,000 visitors a day, with peak days reaching 70,000 — more than 9 million visitors annually, according to the city’s government.

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Rome residents, persons with disabilities and children under the age of 5 are exempt from the fee.

Tourists gathered around the Trevi Fountain

The fee will fund the goals of managing crowd flows, protecting the fountain and improving the visitor experience, the city says.  (Stefano Montesi – Corbis/Getty Images)

The fee will fund the goals of managing crowd flows, protecting the fountain and improving visitors’ experiences.

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During renovations last year, Rome Mayor Roberto Gualtieri said, “The situation at the Trevi Fountain is becoming technically very difficult to manage.”

tourists crowd trevi fountain during the day

The Trevi Fountain draws about 30,000 visitors a day, with peak days reaching 70,000 — for more than 9 million visitors annually. (Seyit Konyali/Anadolu via Getty Images)

In 2023, some 36 million tourists visited the Lazio region, where Rome is located, according to the Roma Capitale annual statistics report.

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Over $1.52 million was collected in 2023 in coins thrown into the Trevi Fountain, Fox News Digital previously reported.

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The Trevi Fountain’s name derives from a toponym in use in the area since the mid-20th century, according to Rome’s government tourist site.

Brown University trustees remain silent after deadly campus murders

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Brown University’s board of trustees, which features a top bank CEO, billionaires, hedge fund and banking leaders, authors, professors, actresses and scientists, has remained silent after the campus murders that took place earlier this month. 

While the primary duty of the board is to uphold the fiduciary duty of the Ivy League university and does not oversee day-to-day operations, the group is the highest governing body of the school, is responsible for appointing and evaluating the president of the college and approves strategic long-term strategy and planning for the top college.

The board conducts regular reviews of the university president, and has authority over the president’s employment. 

Despite its role as Brown University’s highest governing authority with direct power over presidential oversight and long-term strategy, the board of trustees has declined to comment in the wake of the murders that exposed serious lapses in campus security. (Photo by David L. Ryan/The Boston Globe via Getty Images)

Trustees include prominent Bank of America CEO Brian Moynihan, who serves as the chancellor of the board, Goldman Sachs Chairman of Asset Management Division Rich Friedman, author and Stripe COO Claire Hughes Johnson, Global Head of Blackstone Multi-Asset Investing Joe Dowling, actress Margaret Munzer, former U.S. Rep. David Cicilline, Boston Legacy Football Club’s Ami Kuan Danoff, and other banking leaders and billionaires.

EVIDENCE SHOWS DEADLY BROWN, MIT SHOOTINGS MAY BE LINKED, SOURCES SAY: REPORT

Fox News Digital reached out to every trustee on the board, but did not receive any responses. 

Brown University President Christina Paxson has faced intense criticism for the university’s handling of both equipping the school with security resources to prevent the shooting, and campus police’s inability to apprehend the killer in the aftermath of the murders.

Earlier this month, a lone gunman, whom police identified as Portuguese national Claudio Neves-Valente, canvassed the campus prior to taking the lives of two Brown University students on Dec. 13. Investigators credit a homeless man who was living on campus with being a primary source in identifying and ultimately locating the alleged shooter.

images of claudio manuel neves-valente

Images of Claudio Manuel Neves-Valente are displayed on a projector screen at a news briefing in Providence, Rhode Island. The 48-year-old former student and Portuguese national has been identified as the gunman behind a mass shooting that killed two students and wounded nine. (Andrea Margolis/Fox News Digital)

HUNT FOR BROWN UNIVERSITY KILLER HANDICAPPED BY SECURITY LAPSES, CAMPUS BUDGET CUTS

The homeless man, who is known by the pseudonym John, was living in the basement of Brown’s Barus and Holley engineering building. Police couldn’t identify him on their own and asked social media to help find a person in proximity to the actual person of interest. 

Questions remain as to why a homeless person was allowed to take shelter in the basement of the Ivy League school’s facility. 

There was limited surveillance in the building where the mass shooting took place, and had the killer been apprehended, it may have saved the life of an MIT professor who authorities said was murdered in his home by Neves-Valente days later.

split image of victims in the brown and mit shootings

Brown University victims Ella Cook and Mukhammad Aziz Umurzokov, alongside MIT professor Nuno Loureiro, who was killed. (Instagram/elinacoutlakis/GoFundMe/Jake Belcher for MIT)

NOEM ANNOUNCES PAUSE ON IMMIGRANT VISA LOTTERY THAT ALLOWED ALLEGED BROWN SHOOTER TO ENTER US

A custodian at the university told The Boston Globe he saw the alleged gunman nearly a dozen times prior to the attack, hiding in bathrooms to avoid being seen and even reported the unusual activity to a campus security guard in November.

Authorities found Neves-Valente dead by suicide in a storage shed in Salem, New Hampshire, on Thursday night. 

In her statement following the discovery, Paxson condemned “gun violence,” targeted “harmful doxxing activity” and noted “no indication of any concerns pertaining to conduct or any public safety interactions” by Neves-Valente while he was a student at Brown for a short time more than 20 years ago.

BROWN UNIVERSITY SHOOTING PROBE FACES HURDLES AFTER CAMPUS EMPTIES OUT AS WITNESSES SCATTER: FORMER FBI AGENT

Brown University mass shooting location

Interior view of Barus and Holley Room 166 on the campus of Brown University in Providence, R.I. On Saturday, Dec. 13, around 4 p.m., a masked man with a gun entered a review session in Barus & Holley Room 166 for ECON 0110: “Principles of Economics,” shouted something indiscernible and opened fire. (Kenna Lee/The Brown Daily Herald)

“In the aftermath of the shooting, we have seen harmful doxxing activity directed toward several students, faculty and staff, and multiple offices have been committed to providing support,” Paxson said. 

“We also have worked aggressively to combat disinformation in online media and activity that has gone as far as to threaten individuals in our community,” the university president added.

When asked about whether the lack of cameras on campus was a hindering factor in catching the mass shooter, she said, “I do not think a lack of cameras in that building had anything to do with what happened there.”

Paxson, whose annual salary surpassed $3 million in 2023, and the university have been heavily criticized for negligence in both protecting the campus and finding Neves-Valente, who went on to take another life in Massachusetts after murdering two Ivy League students, authorities said.

Christina Paxson at press conference

Brown University President Christina H. Paxson speaks during a news conference after a mass shooting prompted a lockdown on campus on Dec. 13, 2025. (Getty)

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Sources told Fox News that the university is preparing to face lawsuits resulting from the shooting, and confirmed Monday morning they have retained former U.S. attorney Zachary Cunha to represent the Ivy League school.

Fox News Digital reached out to Brown University to see if the board was planning on issuing any statement regarding the shooting, security measures or any plans for the future of Brown, but did not receive a response.

Preston Mizell is a writer with Fox News. Story tips can be sent to Preston.Mizell@fox.com and on X @MizellPreston

‘Most complained-about’ holiday attractions include those with big crowds and high prices

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Christmas lights, holiday markets and winter wonderlands usually spread cheer — but some of the country’s most popular attractions have also delivered a frustrating experience for many Americans, according to Tripadvisor reviews. 

Visitors cite everything from massive crowds and long waits to high prices and underwhelming displays in their negative ratings posted on the review site. 

The list was compiled by Nomad eSIM, a global digital service that analyzed Tripadvisor data. It ranked U.S. Christmas attractions by the volume of one- and two-star reviews the locations received.

TOP TRAVEL DESTINATIONS GAINING BUZZ FOR 2026 TRIPS REVEALED IN NEW REPORT

Criticism or not, many of these attractions remain wildly popular. Fox News Digital reached out to each of the venues for comment and thoughts. 

Here’s a look at America’s most “disappointing” Christmas attractions, according to the compiled list.

Despite massive popularity, several U.S. Christmas attractions rank among the “most complained-about” venues on Tripadvisor. (Getty Images)

1. An Old Time Christmas at Silver Dollar City, Branson, Missouri

The holiday venue in Branson includes more than 6.5 million lights, Broadway-style performances, craft demonstrations and traditional seasonal meals, according to the park’s website.

Even so, the park received the most low-rated reviews of all U.S. Christmas attractions on Tripadvisor.

Visitors most frequently cited long wait times, heavy crowding and dissatisfaction with food and entertainment offerings during peak holiday periods.

MEGA-FANS SWARM QUAINT NEW ENGLAND TOWNS, CHASING CHRISTMAS MOVIE CHARM

One reviewer from Ohio said his or her family of 14 spent roughly $1,500 on tickets and add-ons during a holiday visit — describing the experience as poorly managed.

Another visitor wrote, “Absolutely the worst experience we have ever had at an amusement park,” noting three-hour wait times, overcrowding and limited access to food and seating.

2. Santa Claus House, North Pole, Alaska

Santa Claus House describes itself as a year-round attraction.

It offers Santa meet-and-greets, Christmas-themed merchandise and seasonal displays in the town of North Pole, Alaska, according to the attraction’s website.

Two women browsing holiday gifts at a festive Christmas market stall decorated with ornaments, lights, and seasonal décor.

Some of the most popular holiday and Christmas venues in the U.S. receive reviews mentioning long wait times and high prices. (iStock)

The attraction received the second-highest number of low-rated reviews among U.S. Christmas destinations on Tripadvisor.

Reviewers mentioned the experience as overpriced and limited in scope.

One reviewer wrote, “Don’t make this anything but a bathroom stop.

THE TOP 10 CHRISTMAS CITIES IN THE US, WITH A SURPRISE CITY AS THE WINNER

Paul Brown, the venue’s operations manager, told Fox News Digital, “While it makes for a sensational headline, this ‘report’ from Nomad certainly stretches the truth to get there. For example, see our overall 4.1-star rating on TripAdvisor and the fact that we have consistently been a ‘Best of TripAdvisor.’ [We] are currently a Travelers’ Choice — which means we’re ranked ‘in the Top 10% of properties on TripAdvisor.’”

“We must be doing something right, or we wouldn’t be celebrating our 73rd Christmas this year.”

Brown said that while the location takes “all customer feedback seriously, we also consider the context. Regarding the online review sites … the number of reviews in this case is a small percentage of the traffic we get even on a daily basis, so it is hardly representative of overall guest satisfaction,”

He added, “We like to think we must be doing something right, or we wouldn’t be celebrating our 73rd Christmas this year.”

3. Oglebay Park Festival of Lights, Wheeling, West Virginia

The Wheeling venue features a nightly drive-through holiday light display, along with additional seasonal attractions such as Santa’s Village and Christmas-themed activities at the park’s zoo, its website notes. 

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The attraction received the third-highest number of low-rated reviews among U.S. Christmas destinations on Tripadvisor.

Visitors were unhappy about long wait times to enter the park, particularly during peak holiday evenings, as well as disappointed with portions of the light display.

Visitors walking through a festive holiday village with trees and buildings decorated in colorful Christmas lights at dusk.

Many visitors say the most “complained-about” venues had long wait times to enter. Others simply expected more out of the destinations.  (Getty Images)

One reviewer said the trip was the “biggest waste of time to drive four hours to see a pathetic light display.”

Other visitors called the experience “awful” and “overrated.”

4. Lights Under Louisville, Kentucky

This seasonal drive-through holiday attraction is held inside the Louisville Mega Cavern, a former limestone mine located roughly 100 feet beneath the city. 

The event features illuminated displays along a route that takes vehicles through underground caverns, the attraction’s website said.

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The attraction received the fourth-highest number of low-rated reviews among U.S. Christmas destinations on Tripadvisor. Complaints centered on long wait times and disappointment with the display.

One reviewer called it “an expensive light show that didn’t feel very Christmas-themed.”

Another visitor said the experience did not compare favorably to other holiday light events the person had attended.

5. Christkindlmarkt, Bethlehem, Pennsylvania

Christkindlmarkt is a seasonal Christmas market often referred to as “Christmas City.” 

It features European-style vendors, handcrafted goods and holiday food offerings, the event’s website said.

The market received the fifth-highest number of low-rated reviews among U.S. Christmas attractions on Tripadvisor.

Children smiling and waving from a car driving through a tunnel of golden holiday lights at a festive drive-through light display.

Criticism or not, many of these Christmas-focused attractions remain wildly popular. (Getty Images)

Multiple reviewers pointed to high entry fees, crowded walkways and the cost of food and merchandise, with several reviewers questioning whether the experience justified the price.

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One reviewer wrote, “You pay $15 just to enter, and the prices inside were more than double what I’ve paid elsewhere.”

Another visitor said, “After experiencing real German Christmas markets, this one falls very short.”

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While these attractions received many low-rated reviews, they also continue to attract large numbers of visitors each year — which can contribute to higher expectations.

Dinosaur limping evidence found in 150 million-year-old Colorado trackway

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Paleontologists may have uncovered the traces of a dinosaur that may have been limping, thanks to fossilized footprints preserved in stone for over 150 million years.

In a Nov. 25 press release from the University of Queensland (UQ), Australian officials announced that the discovery was made at an ancient trackway near Ouray, Colorado.

Measuring over 310 feet long, the trackway consists of around 130 footprints. The dinosaur that made the track was likely four-legged and long-necked, belonging to the sauropod clade. 

SHOPPERS AT POPULAR MARKETPLACE WALKED OVER ‘VILE’ DUNGEON AS ARCHAEOLOGISTS CITE ‘REMARKABLE’ FINDS

Speaking to Fox News Digital, UQ paleontologist Anthony Romilio said a long, looping dinosaur trackway like the Colorado one is “very rare.”

“Trackways that are turning are even rarer,” he said. “Trackways that loop… well, there are only two known in the world; the one in Colorado and one in China.”

A dinosaur’s 150-million-year-old footprints show signs of a limp, according to Australian researchers. (Paul Murphey/San Diego Natural History Museum; De Agostini via Getty Images)

“However, a rockslide has destroyed the one in China. So, that leaves this to be the only existing looping dinosaur trackway in the world.”

Though the exact species is unknown, Romilio said that Camarasaurus and Diplodocus are two dinosaur species that roamed Colorado at that time.

“Camarasaurus was equivalent to being ‘front-wheel drive’, with its weight shifted more over the shoulders and front feet, and so there is a tendency to leave deeper handprints than footprints,” he said.

“Diplodocus, on the other hand, was equivalent to being ‘rear-wheel drive’ with weight shifted over the hips, meaning its footprints are deeper than handprints.”

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Whether the dinosaur was limping because of a conflict with another dinosaur is also unknown, for now.

“It is difficult to determine whether other dinosaurs were present at the time,” said Romilio.

Large aerial of ancient trackway in Colorado

The rare Colorado trackway offers an unusually long sequence of steps preserved in stone. (Paul Murphey/San Diego Natural History Museum)

“As paleontologists, we work carefully within the bounds of the evidence, and in this case the information doesn’t yet indicate a confrontation or interaction with another dinosaur,” he added. “That said, the looping path is unusual…the idea that the trackmaker might have been avoiding something is certainly a compelling speculative interpretation.”

Footprints and trackways, Romilio noted, can only be made when an animal is alive — and the remnants can reveal how these ancient creatures walked and ran in ways that fossil bones can’t.

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“In terms of taking trackway-measurements, long trackways like this one allow us the opportunity to even undertake statistical analyses,” he noted. 

“By assessing the difference between the steps made with the left leg versus that from the right, we found there was a statistically significant difference across the 130-plus footprints.”

Romilio added, “There was clearly a difference, but whether that was due to a prior injury resulting in a persistent limp and simply having preference for one side over the other is speculation. We’d need a time-machine to know for sure.”

Computer graphic of dinosaur next to human

Digital mapping tools let paleontologists analyze the ancient trackway with modern precision. (Anthony Romilio/University of Queensland)

Romilio noted that it was local residents — not scientists — who first discovered the site.

“The looping trackway has been known to residents since the mid-1950s. It was accessible, frequently visited and quietly appreciated long before it entered scientific discourse,” he said. 

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“It was only much later that the site was formally communicated to researchers, with the first scientific study undertaken roughly five years ago.”

The paleontologist said that the long trackways make detailed analysis logistically difficult, but thanks to digital tools, they’re able to analyze them “with far greater precision and completeness than was previously possible.”

Aerial view of dinosaur trackway

The trackway “was accessible, frequently visited and quietly appreciated long before it entered scientific discourse,” Romilio said. (Paul Murphey/San Diego Natural History Museum)

The latest discovery is one of many dinosaur-related finds that made headlines in 2025.

Earlier this year, a Connecticut high school student found a 150 million-year-old fossil from the Jurassic era at a Montana dig.

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At around the same time, scientists announced the discovery of a new dinosaur species called Joaquinraptor casali in Argentina. 

Archaeologists uncover ancient Roman concrete technology at Pompeii ruins

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Archaeologists excavating a Pompeii site uncovered the secret behind the longevity of ancient Roman structures: a unique concrete mixture that could chemically repair itself over time.

A recent study, which was published in the journal Nature Communications earlier in December, centered around a construction site that was abandoned after the eruption of Mount Vesuvius in 79 AD.

The construction site was buried under volcanic ash, which preserved it for nearly 2,000 years. Archaeologists found rooms with unfinished walls, piles of premixed dry building material and weighing and measuring tools for preparing concrete.

SCIENTISTS SHATTER TIMELINE OF HUMAN FIRE-MAKING WITH 400,000-YEAR-OLD DISCOVERY IN ENGLAND

Construction workers were building domestic rooms, a bakery with ovens, grain-washing basins and storage facilities when the volcano erupted.

At the site, researchers found that Romans used a specific method of developing durable, self-healing concrete — a substance that revolutionized architecture.

A newly analyzed construction site in Pompeii, preserved by the 79 AD eruption of Mount Vesuvius, reveals Roman builders used a self-healing concrete technique that helped structures endure for centuries. (Richard Baker/In Pictures via Getty Images; Leemage/Corbis via Getty Images)

It was no secret that Romans used concrete — it was used to build the Colosseum, the Pantheon and countless other ancient buildings — but the specific method of concrete mixing had remained unknown until now.

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Romans used a technique called “hot mixing” in which they added quicklime to water, volcanic rock and ash, triggering a chemical reaction that naturally heated the mixture.

The method created white chunks called lime clasts, and when water seeped in, those clasts would dissolve and reform into calcium carbonate, allowing the concrete to heal and seal the damage.

Tourists standing at Pompeii park

The Pompeii ruins, preserved under volcanic ash, offer insight into Roman engineering and construction practices. (Eliano Imperato/Anadolu via Getty Images)

Admir Masic, a Massachusetts Institute of Technology professor who co-authored the study, told Reuters that he felt like he “traveled back in time” during the excavation.

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Working at the site was like “standing beside the workers as they mixed and placed their concrete,” said Masic.

The site dates over a century after the Romans began industrializing concrete in the first century BC. This method differed from previous documents from the era, particularly one written by the Roman architect Vitruvius.

Pompeii with vesuvius in the background

The Roman method heated the concrete mixture from within, enhancing its durability and long-term stability. (Antonio Balasco/KONTROLAB/LightRocket via Getty Images)

The study also found that the concrete technique described by Vitruvius may have been outdated by the time that Vesuvius erupted.

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“Imagine what 100 years of difference could mean for the building technology. A good analogy could be the early telephones,” Masic told Reuters. “In the 1920s-30s: rotary dialing, long-distance copper lines. In the 2020s: smartphones using packet-switched digital signals and wireless networks.”

The MIT professor also speculated that the Pompeii discovery may shed some ancient wisdom that modern builders could benefit from.

Large crowd of tourists outside Pompeii

A popular destination for history lovers, Pompeii now offers clues to sustainable modern building techniques, Masic said. (Marco Cantile/LightRocket via Getty Images)

“Modern concretes generally lack intrinsic self-healing capability, which is increasingly important as we seek longer-lasting, lower-maintenance infrastructure,” he said.

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“So while the ancient process itself is not a direct replacement for modern standards, the principles revealed can inform the design of next-generation durable, low-carbon concretes.”

Reuters contributed reporting.

China loads new 100 ICBMs in silo fields near Mongolia border region: report

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China has reportedly loaded more than 100 intercontinental ballistic missiles into three newly constructed silo fields near its border with Mongolia and shows little interest in arms control talks, according to a draft Pentagon report seen by Reuters.

The assessment underscores Beijing’s accelerating military buildup, with the report saying China is expanding and modernizing its nuclear forces faster than any other nuclear-armed power. Chinese officials have repeatedly dismissed such findings as attempts to “smear and defame China and deliberately mislead the international community.”

The Pentagon declined to comment when contacted by Fox News Digital about the Reuters report.

Military vehicles carrying DF-41 intercontinental ballistic missiles travel past Tiananmen Square during the military parade marking the 70th founding anniversary of People’s Republic of China, on its National Day in Beijing, China Oct. 1, 2019. Jason Lee/Reuters (Jason Lee/Reuters)

Last month, U.S. President Donald Trump said he may pursue denuclearization discussions with China and Russia. The Pentagon report, however, concluded that Beijing does not appear inclined to engage.

“We continue to see no appetite from Beijing for pursuing such measures or more comprehensive arms control discussions,” the report said.

TAIWAN UNVEILS $40B DEFENSE SPENDING PLAN TO COUNTER CHINA MILITARY THREAT OVER NEXT DECADE

The Zhuque-2 carrier rocket, a methane-liquid oxygen rocket by Chinese company LandSpace, takes off from the Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center, near Jiuquan, Gansu province, China July 12, 2023.

China’s rocket force has rapidly advanced. (CNS Photo via Reuters)

According to the assessment, China has likely loaded more than 100 solid-fueled DF-31 intercontinental ballistic missiles into silo fields near the Mongolian border. While the Pentagon had previously disclosed the existence of the silo fields, it had not publicly estimated how many missiles had been placed inside them.

China’s embassy in Washington did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The report did not identify potential targets for the newly loaded missiles and could change before it is formally submitted to Congress, U.S. officials said.

CHINA’S ENERGY SIEGE OF TAIWAN COULD CRIPPLE US SUPPLY CHAINS, REPORT WARNS

rocket carrying Shenzhou-21 launches

China’s Long March 2F rocket, carrying three astronauts for the Shenzhou 21 manned space mission, blasts off at the Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center in Jiuquan, northwestern China, Friday, Oct. 31, 2025. (AP Photo/Andy Wong) (Andy Wong/AP Photo)

China’s nuclear warhead stockpile remained in the low 600s in 2024, reflecting what the report described as a slower production rate compared to previous years. Still, Beijing is on track to exceed 1,000 nuclear warheads by 2030.

China says it adheres to a nuclear strategy of self-defense and maintains a no-first-use policy. But analysts say Beijing’s public messaging increasingly contradicts that restraint.

“For a country that still advocates a policy of ‘no-first use,’ China has become increasingly comfortable showcasing its nuclear arsenal, including parading its nuclear triad together for the first time in September,” said Jack Burnham, a senior research analyst in the China Program at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies.

TRUMP ORDERS US NUCLEAR WEAPONS TESTING TO BEGIN ‘IMMEDIATELY’ AFTER RUSSIA TESTS NEW MISSILES

U.S. President Donald Trump (L) and China's President Xi Jinping shake hands while walking at Mar-a-Lago estate after a bilateral meeting in Palm Beach, Florida, U.S., April 7, 2017.

Trump and Xi will meet in South Korea for the first time in six years, on Oct. 30, 2025. (Carlos Barria/Reuters)

Burnham said Beijing’s rejection of arms control talks reflects the pace of its weapons construction. “China has no interest in locking in a long-term strategic disadvantage, and every intention of building an arsenal on par with its perceived place in the world, alongside and potentially eventually ahead of the United States,” he said.

The report also warned that China expects to be able to fight and win a war over Taiwan by the end of 2027. Beijing claims the self-governed island as its own territory and has never ruled out the use of force.

China is refining options to seize Taiwan by “brute force,” including long-range strikes up to 2,000 nautical miles from the mainland that could disrupt U.S. military operations in the Asia-Pacific, the report said.

The findings come as the 2010 New START treaty, the last remaining nuclear arms control agreement between the United States and Russia, approaches expiration. The treaty limits both sides to 1,550 deployed strategic nuclear warheads.

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China's J-20 fighter jets fly in the sky

J-20 fighter jets fly in the sky during flight performance at the aviation open-day activities of the Chinese People’s Liberation Army Air Force (PLAAF) and the Changchun Air Show 2025 on Sept. 19, 2025 in Changchun, Jilin Province of China. The event will be held from Sept. 19 to 23 in Changchun.  (VCG via Getty Images)

“What is surprising is that China has now loaded only about 100 of the silos it has built recently,” said Gordon Chang. “That’s an indication money is tight in the People’s Liberation Army.”

Chang warned against extending New START without Beijing’s participation. “This is no time for the U.S. to agree to an extension of the New START Treaty with Russia,” he said. “Russia and China are de-facto allies, and they are ganging up on America. Without China in a deal — Beijing has flatly rejected every nuclear arms-control initiative of the U.S. —no treaty can be in America’s interest.”

Reuters contributed to this report.

Christmas travel is surging as gas prices drop to $2.85 nationwide on average

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Christmas travelers are getting a major break at the pump this year.

Gas prices have hit their lowest level in four years, leaving a little extra room in the budget for everything else that comes with the season.

Some 122.4 million Americans will travel at least 50 miles from home over the holiday period of Saturday, Dec. 20, to Thursday, Jan. 1, AAA projects. 

FLYING FOR CHRISTMAS? AVOID 3 TRAVEL MISTAKES THAT RUIN HOLIDAY TRIPS AND GET PEOPLE IN TROUBLE

Over 8 million travelers will take domestic flights — while 109.5 million Americans will be traveling by car for their year-end trips, the report noted.

In 2024, the national average price of gas was $3.04. This year the national average has dropped to its lowest in the past four years.

Christmas travelers are saving big as gas prices drop to their lowest level in four years, at an average of $2.855 across the nation. (iStock)

The record high prices of gas were recorded on June 14, 2022, at an average of $5.016.

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The average price for a regular gallon of gas on Dec. 22 was recorded at $2.855 by AAA.

Gas pump sign at $2.83 at asWay Xpress Mart in Schenectady, N.Y.

Eleven states are right now below the national average price for a gallon of regular gas. (Lori Van Buren/Albany Times Union via Getty Images)

Eleven states have been recorded below the national average.

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Take a look at this list from AAA. 

Oklahoma $2.293

Iowa $2.430

Arkansas $2.418

Colorado $2.441

Texas $2.467

Wisconsin $2.472

man in santa hat filling up truck with gas

Oklahoma has the lowest national price of gas at $2.293. (Chip Chipman/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

Tennessee $2.474

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Kansas $2.487

Louisiana $2.488

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Mississippi $2.486

Missouri $2.498

Attorney predicts life sentence likely for Nick Reiner murder case

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Attorney Matt Murphy is sharing insight into what the road ahead looks like for Nick Reiner after he was taken into custody for allegedly murdering his parents, beloved Hollywood actor and director, Rob Reiner, and his wife, Michele Reiner.

When speaking with Fox News Digital, Murphy explained that discovery is still ongoing in this case, saying Nick’s lawyer, Alan Jackson, “needs to carefully review as much discoveries as he can get,” so that he can “confidently decide” if his client should “just plead not guilty” or to submit a “guilty by reason of insanity plea.”

“So continuing an arraignment, there’s nothing unusual about that. And it’s also important to remember that Nick Reiner not being transported – there’s no verdict on that. There’s no mental health professional that is making that call. The defense has the unilateral ability to, like I said, declare a doubt. And they can say, ‘My client isn’t ready to do this yet,’ and at this stage, the court basically has to take them at their word.”

Murphy says Jackson now has to “get his clients stabilized [and] communicative,” adding that the next step in the process is to “hurry up and wait.” He added that he “wouldn’t be surprised to see this arraignment continued” a few times, until Jackson “decides whether or not he’s going to enter a plea.”

Murphy says the case is still in the discovery phase. (Laura Cavanaugh/FilmMagic)

ROB REINER AND WIFE MURDERED: TIMELINE SHOWS ARGUMENT WITH SON NIGHT BEFORE DEATHS

He explained that the defense will likely ask the court for time to evaluate everything, and knowing that this case has the potential for the death penalty, Murphy emphasized that he wouldn’t “want the public’s desire for an outcome ever to influence the constitutional rights of a criminal defendant” and therefore would support that.

“The defense will then prepare what’s known as a live-z packet, or in Los Angeles County, they call it a live z hearing. He’s gonna accumulate as much information as he can regarding factors in mitigation,” he explained. “In the death penalty analysis, it’s about factors in aggravation versus factors in mitigation. And some big factors in mitigation Alan Jackson’s gonna argue are, the history of substance abuse, the family dynamics, the fact that these weren’t strangers, these were his parents that knew him, et cetera, et cetera et cetera.”

WATCH: ATTORNEY MATT MURPHY SHARES WHAT THE NEXT STEPS ARE IN NICK REINER’S CASE

Jackson will then present the packet to Los Angeles County District Attorney, Nathan Hochman, and his staff.

LEGENDARY DELI MADE FAMOUS BY ROB REINER’S MOST ICONIC MOVIE SCENE 

“Nathan Hockman will then make a decision regarding whether they’re gonna seek the death penalty or whether they are simply gonna seek life without possibility of parole,” Murphy said. “And again, my prediction is they’re going to seek LWOP. They’re gonna to seek life without possibility parole. But I could be surprised. I’ve been wrong before.”

Nick Reiner and Rob Reiner

Murphy predicts Nick will receive a sentence of life in prison without the possibility of parole. ( Rommel Demano/Getty Images)

After Nick was detained under suspicion of murdering his parents, his history with addiction and mental health struggles have resurfaced.

Murphy predicts Jackson will come in with “some sort of mental health defense based on the addiction,” and his struggles with mental health issues, but said there is a difference as far as “organic mental illness” goes. Organic mental illness encompasses illnesses such as “schizophrenia that develops, that is no fault of the defendant.”

NICK REINER WILL BE CHARGED IN ROB REINER, MICHELE REINER’S DEATHS

“In other words, they get sick, they get mentally ill, and then they try to self-medicate, or they get into drugs as a result of that,” Murphy said. “I haven’t heard any of that yet on Nick Reiner.”

He went on to compare Nick’s case to another he worked in Orange County, California, which involved a young man with documented organic mental illness, who murdered his parents and was deemed legally sane and found guilty.

Nick Reiner in court accused of killing his parents Rob Reiner and Michele Singer-Reiner

Murphy compared Nick’s case to a similar case he worked in Orange County. (Mona Edwards)

“California uses what’s known as The McNaughton Rule,” Murphy said. “The McNaughton Rule is about 150 years old, and it basically stands for the proposition that if the criminal defendant understands the nature and quality of their acts, the nature and the quality of the acts at the time they commit the murder, then they are legally responsible even if they’re high, even if their drunk, even they’re suffering from mental illness.”

WATCH: ATTORNEY MATT MURPHY SAYS ALAN JACKSON IS ‘UP AGAINST A TOUGH ONE’ DEFENDING NICK REINER

ROB REINER AND WIFE MICHELE WERE FOUND DEAD IN THEIR BEDROOM: LAPD

“So the way we would explain it to our juries is if the devil pops up on the guy’s shoulder and says ‘hey go over there and stab that banana,’ the person does not understand that they’re killing a human being,” he continued. “In other words, they don’t understand the nature and quality of their acts. However, if it’s the devil pops up on your shoulder and says, go kill those people or I’m going to turn you into a frog, you still under the law have a moral and legal responsibility to tell the devil no.”

WATCH: ATTORNEY MATT MURPHY SAYS IT WOULDN’T SHOCK HIM TO SEE ‘A BATTLE OF THE EXPERTS’ DURING THE NICK REINER TRIAL

Due to these factors, Murphy said that “as good as Alan Jackson is, he’s up against a tough one,” adding that being intoxicated is not a “true defense to murder,” because if it was, “nobody would ever be held accountable for murder.”

In terms of the actual trial, Murphy says that it’s possible that the defense will “declare a doubt regarding the mental competency” of their client, after which “the court will appoint two experts to do an evaluation,” and then “you wind up with this very long procedural process.”

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Michele Reiner, Rob Reiner, Nick Reiner

Murphy predicts the defense will “declare a doubt” about Nick’s mental competency. (Michael Buckner/Getty Images for Teen Vogue)

“Doctors will evaluate Nick Reiner and render their opinions,” he said. “And then if he’s found to be incompetent, then he goes to a mental health facility. It’s locked down for treatment and medication so that he will come back. And sometimes you see, it’s almost like a game, a ping pong, where the mental health professionals will certify somebody for competency, send them back to court, and then the defense lawyer will declare a doubt again.”

Murphy made it clear that the investigation doesn’t stop when charges are filed and that both the defense and the prosecution will conduct “a very dedicated [and a] very professional investigation.”

WATCH: ATTORNEY MATT MURPHY PREDICTS NICK REINER’S TRIAL ‘IS GOING TO BE A VERY LONG PROCESS’

A video of Nick walking into a gas station and buying a drink following the murder has since surfaced online, and he allegedly was “acting bizarrely” prior to the murders while at Conan O’Brien’s holiday party, two things Murphy says “can cut both ways.”

“With a very skilled trial lawyer like Alan Jackson, he’s going to argue, ‘Look, that means he doesn’t know that he did anything wrong,'” Murphy explained. “And what the prosecution is going to say is. ‘Look, that guy, clearly, he’s not howling at the moon. He knows how to use a credit card. He knows that he’s dealing with a person behind the register.’ And truly, under the law, it’s a very, very strict standard under the McNaughton rule.”

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Rob Reiner, Michele Reiner

Murphy said it is clear Rob and Michele Reiner loved their son. (Stefanie Keenan)

Murphy ended by acknowledging that “addiction hits almost every family in America,” and that so many people know someone like Nick, adding about Nick that “I think it’s very clear that he was loved by his parents.”

“The number we keep seeing is 17 stints in rehab. I mean, that’s two parents that really love their son,” Murphy said. “Even to the point that he’s 32 years old and they’re bringing him to Conan O’Brien’s party. So he had a lot of advantages in life, and he’s previously described himself as being a spoiled rich kid. So we’ll see where this goes. This is gonna be a very, very interesting case to watch.”

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Holiday flight news reveals 3 passenger mistakes to avoid

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It’s not always winter storms or airline mishaps that disrupt holiday flights — sometimes, it’s the passengers themselves.

With millions of Americans preparing to fly to see family or friends for the holidays, a former flight attendant is warning travelers not to commit common mistakes that can turn Christmas air travel into complete chaos — or make it far more unpleasant than it has to be.

Three issues tend to surface every Christmas and can quickly turn a routine flight into a stressful experience, Skye Taylor, a former flight attendant for 17 years, told Luxury Travel Daily and Jam Press.

BEST SEAT TO AVOID GETTING SICK ON A PLANE

Others weighed in as well on these issues. 

1. Clogging up the overhead bins

Passengers bring a great deal with them during the holidays, said Taylor — from multiple changes of clothes to gifts for loved ones. 

Extra items add to a plane’s weight and frequently create headaches when it comes to fitting bags into the overhead bins.

Holiday travelers tend to overpack, adding weight to the aircraft and creating challenges for overhead bin capacity, said experts. (Getty Images)

“If you can, ship gifts over before you travel so you have less to bring with you,” Taylor suggested.

Taylor said the scramble for space often forces crew members to intervene, slowing down boarding and sometimes resulting in passengers having their bags removed from the cabin.

“Don’t encroach on another person’s personal space.”

Travelers who rely solely on carry-ons are the most likely to be affected when bins fill up.

“It’s a total nightmare trying to fit everyone’s baggage into the overhead [bins] — and cabin crew get the brunt of this,” she said.

STASH A SIMPLE ITEM IN YOUR CARRY-ON TO AVOID TRAVEL DELAYS AND STRESS, EXPERTS ADVISE

Jacqueline Whitmore, an etiquette expert and former flight attendant based in Florida, told Fox News Digital passengers should ensure their bags fit easily into the bin or under the seat in front of them — and they should never move someone else’s belongings without asking.

“Don’t encroach on another person’s personal space,” Whitmore said.

Passengers boarding an airplane and placing luggage in the overhead bins while others find their seats during a crowded boarding process.

Passengers should ensure their bags fit properly — and it’s best to never move another traveler’s belongings without permission, said one etiquette expert and former flight attendant.   (Getty Images)

Taylor and Whitmore both advised passengers who are traveling with heavier loads to consider checking a larger suitcase instead of bringing multiple bags into the cabin.

2. Being unprepared for winter-weather delays

Winter weather routinely causes delays during the holidays, said Taylor. 

Passengers often underestimate how long they may be sitting on the runway — and how cold the cabin can get while they wait.

STOP WEARINGS PAJAMAS ON AIRPLANES, TRANSPORTATION SECRETARY SEAN DUFFY SAYS ABOUT ‘BRINGING CIVILITY BACK’

“Always take a piece of warm clothing with you, even if you’re jetting off to Jamaica,” she said. “You could be sitting on the runway for a while, and the air conditioning, which can be quite warm, does usually run cold in different parts of the aircraft.”

Flights arriving from colder destinations, such as New York, are especially prone to additional delays because of snow or de-icing, Taylor added.

Busy airport gate area with travelers waiting, resting, and charging devices near large windows.

Plane passengers should bring a warm layer to wear or drape over themselves, as cabin temperatures vary and delays are more common on flights from colder regions, a former flight attendant advised.  (Getty Images)

Whitmore said proper etiquette during winter delays is just as important as preparation beforehand.

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“Etiquette is about emotional regulation as much as it is about behavior,” she said. “Losing your temper with the gate agents or flight attendants doesn’t make the plane go any faster. Keep your emotions in check and pack your manners.”

She urged holiday travelers to arrive at the airport two to three hours ahead of boarding — and to “expect the unexpected.”

3. Behaving rudely toward the crew

She said frustration with delays or overcrowding issues can lead travelers to lash out improperly at crew members, said Taylor. 

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She said abuse toward staff becomes especially common around Christmas, when both passengers and airline employees are under extra stress.

Airline staff assisting travelers at an airport check-in area as passengers present documents near a departures board.

With tensions tending to rise during holiday travel, passengers need to remember to treat crew members with respect, an expert advised.  (iStock)

“We’re human, just like you,” Taylor said. 

“People and crew are away from home — sitting in a hotel room — rather than their own at Christmas. We’re missing family — or flying on the day to get you to yours.”

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She noted that yelling at flight attendants does nothing to speed up delays or resolve issues, as crews are often given information at the last minute themselves.

“We’re human, just like you.”

“Use some humanity,” she urged, during the season. 

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Whitmore agreed that remaining respectful is key even when travel goes wrong.

“Flight attendants are there for your safety, not to wait on you hand and foot,” she said.Â