12 Iconic Woodstock Photos That Will Instantly Transport You Back to the Legendary 1969 FestivalNew Foto - 12 Iconic Woodstock Photos That Will Instantly Transport You Back to the Legendary 1969 Festival

Fotos International/Getty It's been over five decades since theoriginal Woodstock Music Festival took place, and the performances — and images from those sets — remain iconic. The historic event took place on a 600-acre dairy farm in Bethel, N.Y., from Aug. 15-18, 1969. Half a million people attended the rainy festival, which coincided with the country grappling with major cultural and political issues. "With everything that was going on in the late 1960s — the war in Vietnam, civil and human rights issues, the Rev.Martin Luther King Jr.'s assassination — we rallied and relied on strength in numbers," Richie Havens, who performed the first set of Woodstock,wrote for CNNin 2009. "We came together communally to be heard and to be acknowledged." However, not everyone saw the three-day festival as magical. "Woodstock wasn't peace and love. There was an awful lot of shouting and screaming going on,"The WhosingerRoger DaltreytoldThe New York Timesin 2019. "By the time it all ended, the worst sides of our nature had come out. People were screaming at the promoters; people were screaming to get paid. We had to get paid, or we couldn't get back home." FromJimi Hendrix's interpretation of "The Star-Spangled Banner" and Joe Cocker's passionate "With a Little Help From My Friends" toJoan Baez's performance of "Joe Hill" andSantanaplaying a version of "Soul Sacrifice" that seemed like it might never end, the artists' sets were as legendary as the muddy fields. Santana was a crowd favorite. Meanwhile, other musicians experienced difficulties, like theGrateful Dead's extended set that nearly electrocuted them. "The people were just glad to be entertained, to get their minds off the rain and wind and mud, no matter what was happening," singer-songwriter and guitarist Bob Weir of the DeadtoldRolling Stonein 2019. Weir continued, "Had we played a good set, we probably would have transported them to another reality entirely. Some people made their careers at Woodstock, but we've spent about 20 years making up for it." "It was probably the worst set we've ever performed. And to have performed it in front of a crowd that size was not an altogether fulfilling experience," added Weir. From Hendrix to The Who, relive Woodstock through 12 of the festival's most iconic performance photos. 01 of 12 The self-taught guitarist closed out Woodstock with one of the most memorable sets of the festival. He performed fan favorites like "Hear My Train a Comin'" and "Voodoo Child (Slight Return)" before finishing his set with a scorching interpretation of "The Star-Spangled Banner" that has become nearly synonymous with Woodstock. One month later, during an appearance onThe Dick Cavett Show, Hendrix, who had only slept eight minutes the night before the interview, said, "I don't know, man. I'm an American, so I played it." "They made me sing it in school, so it was a flashback," he told host Dick Cavett of the now career-defining moment. When Cavett mentioned that playing the song in an unorthodox way is almost guaranteed to garner hate mail, the "Hey Joe" singer cut him off, saying, "It's not unorthodox! I thought it was beautiful." 02 of 12 Baez was six months pregnant when sheclosed out the first night of Woodstock, taking the stage just before 1 a.m. for what would become a historic performance. Before performing "Joe Hill," she told the crowd, "This is an organizing song,"according toRolling Stone. At the time, the folk singer and activist's husband, David Harris, was in prison in Texas after refusing to serve in Vietnam. When asked if she thought Woodstock had been romanticized over the years, the "Diamonds & Rust" singer told the publication in 2009 that as both a concert and cultural event, "it hasn't been" and "was fantastic." "I think it takes a moment, and then you get that feeling. It was like the March on Washington," she said. "All of a sudden, you realize there are 350,000 people out there, and something is never going to be the same after that. That is true of Woodstock." Baez added, "It wasn't political. It wasn't like King, but nothing really was the same after that." 03 of 12 The soulful folk singer-songwriter kicked off Woodstock with the first performance of the festival. Four artists were scheduled ahead of Havens, but massive traffic delays impeded their arrival, so he took the stage after some convincing by promoters. Initially planned as a 20-minute set, Havens extended his performance time as the stage was built around him. His biggest moment came from the song "Freedom" that he improvised onstage. "When you see me in the movie [Woodstock] tuning my guitar and strumming, I was actually trying to figure out what else I could possibly play! I looked out at all of those faces in front of me, and the word 'freedom' came to mind," Havens wrote, per CNN. 04 of 12 Cocker and his group, The Grease Band, recorded a cover ofThe Beatles' song "With a Little Help from My Friends" in 1968. His powerful live performance of the tune on the third day of Woodstock put the bluesy British rock singer on the map worldwide. After the legendary set, the crowd allegedly gave Cocker a standing ovation, but the rocker would later refer to his performance as just "okay." "Were we epic? I dunno. We got some nice footage for memories," hetoldLouder(formerly Classic Rock) in 2013, referring to the 1970 concert movie and documentaryWoodstock. "I was wearing a tie-dyed shirt, and when I took it off after, the colors had stained my chest in the exact same pattern." 05 of 12 When Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young took the Woodstock stage after 3 a.m., it was only their second-ever live performance together. The supergroup consisted ofDavid Crosbyof the Byrds,Graham Nashof the Hollies andStephen StillsandNeil Youngof the Buffalo Springfield band. Onstage, Stills told the crowd that they were "scared s-------" — but that fear faded once the group got going. "Scared s--- was gone by, I'd say, bar 16 of the first song at Woodstock," Stillstold theLos Angeles Timesin 2025. 06 of 12 The group — Young joined shortly before Woodstock — performed a mix of acoustic and electric songs during the festival's wee morning hours, including "Suite: Judy Blue Eyes," a cover ofPaul McCartney's "Blackbird" and "Marrakesh Express." They reportedly started off the set as a trio, with Young joining in later. "When we started the suite, it sounded fabulous to me," Nash told theLos Angeles Times, adding, "You know, Woodstock has taken on this incredible myth in the years since, and I understand why — it was an incredible gathering. But it's gotten larger and larger and larger, the myth of it all." 07 of 12 A San Francisco-based psychedelic band that fused Afro-Latin rhythms with blues rock, Santana was one of the least-known bands on the festival bill. However, their eight-song set on day two became a surprise standout. During an epic rendition of "Soul Sacrifice," each band member got their own solo, with then-20-year-old Michael Shrieve's drumming still spoken about in reverent tones and legendary frontmanCarlos Santanashowing the world what he could do with a guitar — while accidentally still high from a hallucinogenic drug given to him by friend and fellow performerJerry Garciaof The Grateful Dead. "It was like being inside a kaleidoscope," the guitarist told PEOPLE in 2023. "And then somebody told me, 'Trust in God. Just ask him to keep you in time and in tune.' So I said, 'God, I really believe in you. If you help me right now, I won't poo my pants in front of everybody.' Next thing I knew, we hit the notes and the people went, 'Wooo!' " The band's encore song, "Fried Neck Bones and Some Home Fries," was the only tune they played that day that did not end up on their self-titled debut album, released only days after Woodstock. Carlos told PEOPLE he was "absolutely not prepared" for the fame that followed. 08 of 12 Jefferson Airplane hit the stage on the second day of the festival. The psychedelic rock group was technically the Saturday headliner; however, due to logistical issues, they didn't take the stage until 7 a.m. on Sunday — after being up for 24 hours and having accidentally taken LSD. "Alright, friends, you have seen the heavy groups. Now you will see morning maniac music. Believe me, yeah. It's a new dawn!" lead singer Grace Slick told the audience,per the Bethel Woods Center for the Arts. Jefferson Airplane performed chilling renditions of their songs, including hits like "Somebody to Love" and "White Rabbit," and closed out with "The House At Pooneil Corners." Despite rave reviews, Slick doesn't look back at Woodstock with rose-colored glasses. This was partially due to the drugs, as Slicktold CBC Radioin 2019 that she "usually did not take acid on purpose" as it "can really mess with your perception of things," like playing songs correctly. "For us, it wasn't quite as marvelous as it might be for somebody who's 18 years old. I was 29, so my idea of fun is not having to watch out for a white dress and no bathrooms and playing at six o'clock in the morning," Slick told the outlet. She added, "So Woodstock, personally, was not fun. But the idea of it, and the idea that we attracted that many people, was kind of amazing. But that's all in your head. That's not what actually happened." 09 of 12 Garcia and The Grateful Dead were only supposed to play for 45 minutes on Woodstock's Saturday bill. Weather and logistical delays caused the San Francisco jam band — then not nearly as wellknown to East Coasters— to go on 90 minutes late at 10:30 p.m., and their extended set lasted almost two hours. The band performed a total of five songs, including opening with "Saint Stephen" and playing the then-unrecorded Garcia-penned ballad "High Time." There were a multitude of issues during their festival performance, which wasn't included in the original 1970Woodstockdocufilm and live album. One major problem was sound engineer Owsley "Bear" Stanley tinkering with the setup for two hours to accommodate the group's notoriously heavy equipment, including removing the grounding, and the large amount of LSD the band consumed. WeirtoldRolling Stonethat "the rain was part of our nightmare" and that "every time I touched my instrument, I got a shock." "The stage was wet, and the electricity was coming through me. I was conducting!" he added. "Touching my guitar and the microphone was nearly fatal. There was a great big blue spark about the size of a baseball, and I got lifted off my feet and sent back eight or 10 feet to my amplifier." 10 of 12 One of the most popular bands on the bill and the first to sign on to the festival,Creedence Clearwater Revivalhit the stage on day two at 1 a.m.. The swamp rock pioneers followed the Grateful Dead, a fellow Bay Area band that played for nearly three hours after dropping LSD. Lead singer-songwriter and guitaristJohn Fogertyblames the Dead for his band's sleepy reception. "At the time, I was what you would call pissed off. They sabotaged our chance in the limelight," hetold theLos Angeles Timesin 2019. "But over time, I have developed quite an affection for the Dead." Fogerty feels CCR played "a great set," which kicked off with "Born on the Bayou" and included "Bad Moon Rising," "Proud Mary" and "Suzie Q," but says "there was almost no reaction," which is part of the reason he didn't allow CCR's set to be included in theWoodstockdocumentary and live album. "About halfway through, I went to the microphone and said, 'We're playing our hearts out for you and want you to have a good time.' And from the back of the field somewhere, I heard a voice shout, 'Don't worry about it, John,' " he told the outlet. "So, in my mind, there was one guy who was awake, and we finished our set for that guy." 11 of 12 Despite a downpour earlier in the day and delays that caused them to not go on until 3:30 a.m. — including the lateSly Stonehaving to be convinced to get onstage — Sly and the Family Stone played one of the most memorable sets of the festival. The bandwas a progenitor of blending funk, soul, R&B, psychedelic rock and gospel, and their blazing performance kicked off with "M'Lady" and included their hits "Everyday People" and "Dance to the Music." However, it was the band's live rendition of "I Want to Take You Higher" that is long remembered as the peak of their Woodstock performance and was immortalized in the 1970 concert documentary and album. "It was pouring rain. Freddie got shocked. The equipment was crackling. ButSly was like a preacher," trumpet player Cynthia Robinson told PEOPLE in 1996 about their performance of the song. "He had half a million people in the palm of his hand." In his 2023 memoir,Thank You (Falettinme Be Mice Elf Agin), the bandleader recalled the call and response of the Woodstock crowd as feeling "like a church." "The horns went up into the sky. When the show was over, we were wet and cold …" Sly wrote,perRolling Stone. "By the next day, it was clear that Woodstock had been a big deal, and that we had been a major part of that deal." He added, "The festival had put a spotlight on lots of groups, but us and Jimi the most." 12 of 12 Many bands on the Woodstock bill weren't nearly as well known at the time as they are today. However, The Who was not one of them. Considered one of the best bandsin the world, their loud and iconic performance is long remembered as a Woodstock favorite. They went on 14 hours later at 5:30 a.m. on Aug. 17, performing songs like their first single "I Can't Explain" and their rock opera double albumTommy, featuring "Pinball Wizard." The set was full of big moments, like the sun rising as the British rockers performed "See Me Feel Me," a stage-storming interruption by Abbie Hoffman and an encore with a riff-filled rendition of "My Generation." Not everyone loved the performance, though. While lead vocalist Daltrey considered Woodstock to be a sign of The Who hitting it big in the United States, he also described it as the band's worst show ever. "It was a particularly hard one for me, because of the state of the equipment. It was all breaking down," herecounted toThe New York Timesin 2019. "I'm standing in the middle of the stage with enormous Marshall 100-watt amps blasting my ears behind me. Moon on the drums in the middle. I could barely hear what I was singing." Read the original article onPeople

12 Iconic Woodstock Photos That Will Instantly Transport You Back to the Legendary 1969 Festival

12 Iconic Woodstock Photos That Will Instantly Transport You Back to the Legendary 1969 Festival Fotos International/Getty It's been ove...
Mila Kunis and Ashton Kutcher Step Out For Rare Dinner Date to Celebrate Her 42nd BirthdayNew Foto - Mila Kunis and Ashton Kutcher Step Out For Rare Dinner Date to Celebrate Her 42nd Birthday

Backgrid Mila Kunis turned 42 on August 14. TheBlack Swanactress celebrated by enjoying a rare dinner date with Ashton Kutcher. The longtime couple met in 1998 and have been together since 2012. Mila Kunisis celebrating the big 4-2 with a rare date night opposite her husband,Ashton Kutcher, in Los Angeles. The formerThat's '70s Showco-stars were spotted outside La Dolce Vita, an Italian restaurant in Beverly Hills, the night before Kunis's birthday. In photos captured of their outing, Kutcher wears a loose henley, black pants, and a baseball cap while Kunis models a long black maxidress. Both husband and wife were smiling ear to ear. Getty Images As for their mismatched 'fits? The casual-formal contrast calls to mind fellow A-list couple,Justin and Hailey Bieber, who frequently appear to dress withcompletely different occasionsin mind. Getty Images Kunis and Kutcher don't typically court attention and are raising their children away from the spotlight. Earlier this month, however, the duo were spotted courtside at a WNBA game. Basketball, it turns out, is a family affair in the Kunis-Kutcher household; last summer, kidsWyatt and Dimitrijoined their parents at an Indiana Pacers game in an outing that doubled as theirpublic debut. Getty Images Kunis and Kutcher have been an item since 2012. The longtime couple originally met on the set ofThat '70s Showway back in 1998. When they began dating 14 years later, both actors had recently starred in movies about friend hook-ups (Friends With Benefits, anyone?). "We were just like, let's just hook up," Kunis later toldMarc Maron. "Let's have fun. We're both single. We both trust each other. Everything's great." Read the original article onInStyle

Mila Kunis and Ashton Kutcher Step Out For Rare Dinner Date to Celebrate Her 42nd Birthday

Mila Kunis and Ashton Kutcher Step Out For Rare Dinner Date to Celebrate Her 42nd Birthday Backgrid Mila Kunis turned 42 on August 14. The...
From 'Night Always Comes' to 'Fixed,' 10 movies you need to stream right nowNew Foto - From 'Night Always Comes' to 'Fixed,' 10 movies you need to stream right now

Love movies? Live for TV? USA TODAY's Watch Party newsletter has all the best recommendations, delivered right to your inbox.Sign up nowand be one of the cool kids. Vanessa Kirby is a superhero in the "Fantastic Four" movie, though she's also pretty great at playing not-so-super. Kirby stuns as a woman grieving the loss of her baby in "Pieces of a Woman" and is back in another dramatic Netflix tale with"Night Always Comes,"playing a woman trying to get some last-minute cash. That's one of severalnew movies on streaming services, with HBO Max, Amazon's Prime Video, Hulu and more delivering fresh films to your favorite devices. There's original fare like a Netflix animated comedy with cartoon dogsthat's definitelynotfor kids, plus movies coming in hot off theatrical release like a horror flick with Ashley Greene (which will interest the "Twilight" fam) anda family adventure that's very much a 1980s throwback. Here are 10 new and notable moviesyou can stream right now: This clever and comedic slasher reinvention centers on a teen girl (Katie Douglas) who moves to a small Missouri farm town. The place has a dark past, partly because of the local corn syrup factory burning down but also because of a violent clown named Frendo who stalks youngsters. Perfect for horror fiends who want more plot with their gore. Where to watch:Shudder There's been a ton of "one wild night" R-rated comedies, but not a bunch that star dogs. In the very adult animated romp, a mutt named Bull (voiced by Adam Devine) learns he has 24 hours before he's neutered by the vet, leading to an epic quest with his canine BFFs and maybe a shot at love with the neighbor show dog Honey (Kathryn Hahn). Where to watch:Netflix Pedro Pascalis in approximately 57 movies this year, but none are quite like this bizarrely watchable, throwback action B-movie. The "Fantastic Four" star plays an enforcer on a mission of revenge amid intertwining stories set in 1980s Oakland with Nazi-stabbing youngsters, rap battles, a ninja hoopster anda crusty Tom Hanks. Where to watch:HBO Max Ashley Greene stars in the horror film as a psychic psychiatrist whose home office is suddenly visited by a girl claiming to have a dark being attached to her. The clairvoyant doc and her daughter (Ellie O'Brien) work to help the youngster before it's too late in a solid, visually eerie supernatural tale for those who dig psychological creepers. Where to watch:Hulu There are shades of "E.T." and "The NeverEnding Story" in this family-friendly fantasy. Helena Zengel stars as farm girl Yuri, who's taught by her dad (Willem Dafoe) to hunt and fear mythic creatures known as the Ochi. When she befriends an injured baby one, Yuri goes on an adventurous quest to deliver her new adorable pal home safely. Where to watch:HBO Max Based on a Stephen King short story, Osgood Perkins'gory and gloriously absurd horror comedyunleashes Theo James as estranged twins trying to rid themselves of a cursed monkey toy that's a harbinger of death. It's an extremely demented, intriguingly insightful tale with themes of mortality and buckets of blood. Where to watch:Hulu You're likely to need a stress ball to get through this gripping thriller. Financially strapped Lynette (Vanessa Kirby) is determined to keep a roof over her family's head. When her mom (Jennifer Jason Leigh) fritters away the $25,000 needed to close a home loan, Lyn has to make up the cash overnight, by any means necessary, as well as face past demons. Where to watch:Netflix The constant buddy-comedy banter betweenEddie Murphyand Pete Davidson does wonders to keep this heist flick watchable. Armored truck driver Russell (Murphy) is nearing retirement and is on a cash pickup job with young slacker Travis (Davidson) when the latter gets snookered by a criminal (Keke Palmer) into a high-stakes robbery situation. Where to watch:Prime Video This unsettling thriller features Ben Foster as a man who becomes overly obsessed with the fatal car crashes that happen at a sharp corner in the road in front of his new home. But the intrigue consumes him totally, leading to troubles at work and on the home front with his wife (Cobie Smulders) and young son. Where to watch:Hulu Those who binge bad movies for fun, rejoice! Ice Cube plays a domestic terror analyst dealing with an alien invasion in this "screenlife" thriller – told through apps, texts, email and video chats – that remakes H.G. Wells' classic sci-fi tale. It basks in cheesy, product-placement ridiculousness, like the fate of the world hinging on an online Amazon purchase. Where to watch:Prime Video This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:New movies on Netflix, Amazon, HBO Max, Hulu to stream now

From 'Night Always Comes' to 'Fixed,' 10 movies you need to stream right now

From 'Night Always Comes' to 'Fixed,' 10 movies you need to stream right now Love movies? Live for TV? USA TODAY's Watch...
Japan minister joins crowds at contentious shrine to mark 80 years since World War Two defeatNew Foto - Japan minister joins crowds at contentious shrine to mark 80 years since World War Two defeat

TOKYO (Reuters) -Japan marked the 80th anniversary of its World War Two defeat on Friday, with at least one cabinet minister joining thousands of visitors at a shrine that Japan's Asian neighbours view as a symbol of its wartime aggression. Shinjiro Koizumi, Japan's agriculture minister and a contender in the ruling Liberal Democratic Party's leadership race last year, arrived at the Yasukuni Shrine in Tokyo early on Friday. Among the 2.5 million war dead commemorated at the shrine are 14 wartime leaders convicted of the most serious war crimes, along with over 1,000 others found guilty by Allied tribunals after Japan's 1945 defeat. China and South Korea have criticised past visits by senior Japanese officials that they say gloss over Tokyo's wartime actions and damage diplomatic ties. "It is important never to forget to show respect to those who gave their lives for their country, regardless of which nation it is. I believe this is a very important principle," Koizumi told reporters. Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba attended a separate war memorial event in Tokyo along with Emperor Naruhito. "August 15 is a day to mourn the war dead and commemorate peace. The government will continue to express gratitude to the war dead and their families," government spokesperson Yoshimasa Hayashi said at a regular press briefing. No sitting Japanese prime minister has visited the Yasukuni Shrine since Shinzo Abe in December 2013, drawing an expression of disappointment from then-U.S. President Barack Obama. The last premier to visit on the anniversary of Japan's surrender was Koizumi's father, Junichiro Koizumi, in 2006. Former economic security ministers Sanae Takaichi and Takayuki Kobayashi also went to the shrine, local media reported. Both ran in last year's LDP leadership election. Ishiba on Friday sent an offering to the shrine. One he made in October provoked criticism from both South Korea, a Japanese colony for 35 years, and China, whose territories were occupied by Japanese forces in World War Two. At a press conference, Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi did not directly comment on the Yasukuni visits but said: "Only by facing up to history can one earn respect; only by learning from history can one chart a better future; only by remembering the past can we avoid repeating the same mistakes. We urge Japan to make the right choice." The anniversary comes ahead of an expected meeting with South Korea's President Lee Jae Myung, who will visit Japan on Aug 23-24 to discuss regional security and trilateral ties with the U.S. While relations between Tokyo and Seoul have often been strained, the two countries are deepening security cooperation to counter China's growing influence and the threat posed to both by nuclear-armed North Korea. Celebrating the August 15 liberation from Japanese colonial rule, Lee said the two countries' relationship should be "forward-looking", based on pragmatic diplomacy focusing on Seoul's national interest. Japan's populist Sanseito Party had 88 national and local lawmakers visiting Yasukuni on Friday, its leader Sohei Kamiya said in a social media post. The 'Japanese First' party wants to curb immigration, which it says is a threat to Japanese culture. In July's upper house election, it won 13 new seats, drawing support away from Ishiba's LDP. (Reporting by Tim Kelly, Irene Wang and Joseph Campbell; Additional reporting by Beijing Newsroom; Editing by Saad Sayeed and Raju Gopalakrishnan)

Japan minister joins crowds at contentious shrine to mark 80 years since World War Two defeat

Japan minister joins crowds at contentious shrine to mark 80 years since World War Two defeat TOKYO (Reuters) -Japan marked the 80th anniver...
South Korea's president vows to restore 2018 inter-Korean military agreement to ease tensionsNew Foto - South Korea's president vows to restore 2018 inter-Korean military agreement to ease tensions

SEOUL, South Korea (AP) — South Korea's new liberal president,Lee Jae Myung,said Friday he will seek to restore a 2018 military agreement with North Korea aimed at reducing border tensions and urged Pyongyang to respond to Seoul's efforts to rebuild trust and revive dialogue. Speaking on the 80th anniversary of Korea's liberation from Japanese colonial rule, Lee's overture came amid soaring tensions fueled by North Korean leader Kim Jong Un's nuclear ambitions and deepening ties with Russia over the war in Ukraine. The 2018 military agreement, reached during a brief period of diplomacy between Kim and South Korea's former liberal President Moon Jae-in, created buffer zones on land and sea and no-fly zones above the border to prevent clashes. South Korea's previous conservative government suspended the deal in 2024, citing tensions over North Korea's launches oftrash-laden balloons toward the South,and moved to resume frontline military activities and propaganda campaigns. The step came after North Korea had already declared it would no longer abide by the agreement. "To prevent accidental clashes between South and North Korea and to build military trust, we will take proactive, gradual steps to restore the (2018) Sept. 19 military agreement," Lee said in a televised speech. Lee said his government affirms "our respect for the North's current system" and that the wealthier South "will not pursue any form of unification by absorption and has no intention of engaging in hostile acts." Lee said South Korea remains committed to an international push to denuclearize North Korea and urged Pyongyang to resume dialogue with Washington and Seoul. Amid a prolonged diplomatic stalemate with its rivals, Kim's government has made clear it has no intention of giving up the weapons it sees as its strongest guarantee of survival and would reject any future talks on denuclearization. "Denuclearization is a complex and difficult task that cannot be resolved quickly," Lee said. "However, inter-Korean and U.S.-North Korea dialogue as well as international cooperation will help us approach a peaceful resolution." Conciliatory tone toward Tokyo Japan's defeat in World War II liberated Korea from colonial rule, but the peninsula was then divided into a U.S.-backed, capitalist South and a Soviet-supported, socialist North — a separation cemented by the devastating 1950–53 Korean War. Lee, whose speech came days before he plans to travel to Japan for asummit with Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba,took a conciliatory tone toward Tokyo, calling for the fellow U.S. allies to overcome grievances rooted in Japan's brutal colonial rule and develop future-oriented ties. However, he noted that some historical issues remain unresolved and called on the government in Tokyo to "squarely face up to our painful history and strive to maintain trust between our two countries." Lee's meeting with Ishiba will come just before he flies to Washington for a meeting with U.S. PresidentDonald Trumpover trade and defense issues, a setup that underscores how Trump's push to reset global trade and U.S. security commitments is drawing the often-feuding neighbors closer. Ishiba, eager to improve ties with Seoul, has acknowledged Japan's wartime aggression and has shown more empathy toward Asian victims than his recent predecessors. In a ceremony marking his country's surrender 80 years ago, Ishiba expressed "remorse" over the war, which he called a mistake, restoring the word in a Japanese leader's Aug. 15 address for the first time since former premier Shinzo Abe took it out in 2013. North Korea so far dismissive about Lee's overtures Lee, who took office after winning an early election in June following the ouster of his conservative predecessor Yoon Suk Yeol over a brief imposition of martial law in December, has taken steps to repair ties with the North, including the removal of South Korean frontline loudspeakers that Yoon's government had used to blast anti-North Korean propaganda and K-pop across the border. It's unclear whether North Korea would respond to Lee's overture. Expressing anger over Yoon's hardline policies and expansion of South Korean-U.S. military exercises, Kim last year declared thatNorth Korea was abandoning long-standing goals of a peaceful unification with South Koreaand rewrote the North's constitution to mark the South as a permanent enemy. Lee's speech came a day after Kim's powerful sistermocked his governmentfor clinging to hopes of renewed diplomacy between the war-divided rivals, and misleading the public by falsely claimingthe North had removed its own frontline speakersas a reciprocal gesture toward the South. South Korea's military maintains that it confirmed the North dismantling some of its speakers. Kim Yo Jong also reiterated previous North Korean statements that it has no immediate interest in reviving long-stalled negotiations with Washington and Seoul, citing an upcomingjoint military exercise between the alliesas proof of their continued hostility toward Pyongyang. Analysts say North Korea clearly sees no urgency to resume diplomacy with South Korea or the United States, remaining focused on its alignment with Russia. Since Russia's 2022 invasion of Ukraine, Pyongyang has made Moscow the priority of its foreign policy, sending thousands of troops and large quantities of military equipment, including artillery and missiles, to help fuel the war. In his own speech marking Korea's liberation on Thursday, Kim Jong Un praised the "infinite might" of the country's ties with Russia at an event in the North Korean capital of Pyongyang attended by a Russian government delegation. His speech, published by North Korean state media on Friday, made no mention of Washington or Seoul. ___ AP writer Mari Yamaguchi contributed from Tokyo.

South Korea’s president vows to restore 2018 inter-Korean military agreement to ease tensions

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L.A.'s immigrant community beset by fear as students return to schoolNew Foto - L.A.'s immigrant community beset by fear as students return to school

Los Angeles— With big smiles and colorful backpacks, tens of thousands of students in the Los Angeles Unified School Districtwalked into their first day of classThursday. But heading into this new academic year, some families say they are living in fear. Melissa, an undocumented mother of three U.S. citizen children, said her 8-year-old is afraid. "When we hear that agents are nearby, we run or hide, and he's scared," Melissa told CBS News. She says she has been forced to make a plan in case she is detained and deported. "We've spoken to our eldest," Melissa said. "He'd be in charge of his siblings. It's sad to talk about these plans." Immigration enforcement activity has picked up across the L.A. area over the past four months.In July, federal agents on horsebackswarmed MacArthur Park— which is located near multiple schools in L.A.'s Westlake neighborhood — flanked by armored vehicles and National Guard troops. Officials did not say if there were any arrests during the operation, but L.A. Mayor Karen Bass blasted the move at the time, calling it part of "a political agenda of provoking fear and terror." Some undocumented mothers tell CBS News they are unwilling to risk sending their children to school at all. "I'm scared because I wouldn't be able to handle getting separated from them," said Andrea, an undocumented mother. "Either if they take me and they stay here, or if they're taken and I stay here." One particular sidewalk near downtown L.A. that children use to walk to school is right outside a Home Depot that has been frequently raided this summer. Federal agents continue to patrol this Latino-majority area surrounding MacArthur Park. If they do not possess a signed judicial warrant, they do not have access to have a conversation with anyone, staff member or student or parent," LAUSD Superintendent Alberto Carvalho told CBS News. Carvalho says the district has taken measures to protect families, implementing safe zones outside 100 schools in Latino-majority areas where volunteers and officers will watch for federal immigration activity. On Monday, Nathan Mejia, a 15-year-old student with disabilities,was detainedby federal agents outside Arleta High School in the San Fernando Valley. "They started pointing guns at us, then at the moment when they opened the door, my mom just told me to not move or anything," Mejia told CBS News. "I stepped out, they put me in handcuffs." His mother told CBS Los Angeles that agents showed her a photo of a person who resembled her son, but that was not him. Mejia was quickly released. In asocial media postTuesday, the Department of Homeland Security denied that it was targeting the high school and said that "agents were conducting a targeted operation" on a "suspected MS-13 pledge with prior criminal convictions in the broader vicinity of Arleta." The Trump administration has stressed schools will not be targeted as part of its ongoing immigration crackdown. "This administration wants to ensure that all school children across the country, in every city from Los Angeles to D.C., can go to school safely," White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said in a press briefing Tuesday. According to Carvalho, in LAUSD — the second-largest school district in the nation, with more than half a million students — an estimated one in five students are part of an immigrant family, in which at least one parent is undocumented. He hopes his district's new safe zone measures are enough. "Why have immigration enforcement actions so close to schools, where a 16-year-old, a 15-year-old, may actually be misidentified as an adult?" Carvalho asked. "Should we not have enough empathy and compassion in our hearts to spare children that type of trauma?" Passenger arrested after allegedly causing disturbance midair and forcing flight to divert Tropical Storm Erin expected to become a major hurricane When could Tropical Storm Erin become a hurricane?

L.A.'s immigrant community beset by fear as students return to school

L.A.'s immigrant community beset by fear as students return to school Los Angeles— With big smiles and colorful backpacks, tens of thous...

 

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