Le Journal

Le président Donald Trump a menacé d’invoquer une loi anti-insurrectionnelle
Trump a aussi menacé de déployer les forces militaires américaines dans le Minnesota afin de réprimer les manifestations en réponse aux affrontements violents impliquant des agents fédéraux de l’immigration. « Si les politiciens corrompus du Minnesota n’obéissent pas à la loi et n’empêchent pas les agitateurs professionnels et les insurrectionnels d’attaquer les patriotes de l’I.C.E., […] L’article Le président Donald Trump a menacé d’invoquer une loi anti-insurrectionnelle est apparu en premier sur Contrepoints.

Immobilier de luxe londonien : une crise provoquée par l’alourdissement de la fiscalité

Zaepfel, le joli baptême du feu
:fill(black)/2026/01/15/date-jt-20h-sujet-vert-v1-00-06-51-13-still007-696947c5f1066046823019.jpg)
Groenland : l'Europe défie Trump
"L'ambition américaine d'annexer le Groenland "est intacte" a déclaré ce matin la Première Ministre danoise après une réunion hier soir avec l'administration Trump à Washington. L'Union européenne va envoyer une mission militaire sur place. Son nom : "Arctic endurance"... Mais quel sera son périmètre? Ses moyens d'actions ?

ATP - Calendrier : Le calendrier ATP 2027 est déjà là : du nouveau attendu ? #atptour #atp #AusOpen #AO2026 #Stockholm
Santander-Barcelone en direct commenté

Auburn signs former Oregon State offensive lineman out of transfer portal
THEN AND NOW: Vintage photos show how department stores have changed
Department stores, then and now.Bettmann/Getty Images ; Kamil Krzaczynski/Getty ImagesDepartment stores have changed dramatically over the last 100 years.Department stores once sold necessities. Now, many are struggling to remain in business.While some classic chains cease to exist, other retailers have found ways to increase sales.In the early 1900s, department stores existed to sell necessities, including food, home goods, and apparel.Today, many luxury department stores are struggling to survive.The rise of the internet and surge in online sales have placed a major strain on department stores. Saks Global, the parent company of Saks Fifth Avenue, Bergdorf Goodman, and Neiman Marcus, became the latest department retailer to file for bankruptcy on Tuesday.Take a look at how department stores have changed over the last 100 years.In the early 1900s, department stores were focused on selling the necessities.A Harrods department store.Heritage Images/Getty ImagesCore products included clothing and home goods. During times of war, the necessities on sale included military jackets, coats, and accessories.That's why Harrods, a famous department store in London, featured an in-house tailoring room throughout World War I. The space was utilized to alter used uniforms and sell new ones.Department stores still sell the basics, but novelty items are also typically present.A modern Harrods department store.Prisma by Dukas/Getty ImagesYou can find everything from household tools and fashionable clothes to toys and knickknacks at modern department stores — they seem to sell everything, in an apparent bid to compete with online retailers.Harrods also sells store-branded items, including bags, stationery, and teddy bears.Leading up to the 1930s, department stores were often crowded.A crowded department store.Bettmann/Getty ImagesAround 1929, people were encouraged to shop in order to help boost the nation's sinking economy, Fortune reported.But that same year, the stock market crashed, and the Great Depression officially began. The period lasted for 10 years, causing major layoffs, failing banks, and mass poverty.Today's department stores rarely see such large crowds, aside from major shopping events like Black Friday.CHICAGO, ILLINOIS - NOVEMBER 29: Shoppers visit Macy's department store on Black Friday on November 29, 2024 in Chicago, Illinois. Black Friday marks the official start of the holiday shopping season.Kamil Krzaczynski/Getty ImagesEven during major holiday sales, many modern shoppers still prefer to shop online from the comfort of their homes.In 2025, shoppers in the US were projected to spend a record $11.7 billion online on Black Friday, an 8.3% increase from 2024.It marked a contrast from the wild Black Friday scenes that could be seen in stores in the decade before the COVID-19 pandemic.In the 1920s, employees worked in department store basements to make change for cashiers upstairs.Women working in the basement of a department store making change for the cashiers upstairs, early 1920s. The tubes are operated by a vacuum system that transports the change containers. (Photo by Underwood Archives/Getty Images)Underwood Archives/Getty ImagesIn large stores that existed across multiple floors, vacuum systems transported the change upstairs through tubes.None of those "tube rooms" are needed anymore, thanks to computers and credit cards.JERSEY CITY, NJ - NOVEMBER 25: Customers line up at the cashier area at a Macy's store during Black Friday sales on November 25, 2022 in Jersey City, New Jersey. Black Friday, the day after Thanksgiving, is traditionally regarded as the start of the holiday shopping season, with shoppers flocking to stores and online for bargains, but with consumer confidence down, retailers are bracing for a considerably slower Black Friday.Kena Betancur/Getty ImagesModern shoppers often don't even have to interact with a cashier if they don't want to. Instead, they…

Vidéo. Afrique du Sud, Nouvelle-Zélande, France… Où en sont les favoris de la Coupe du monde 2027 ? Kick-Off Rugby

Disney Finally Catches On to What Guests Have Been Doing for Years

Tupelo Honey Brings Fresh Flavors to Franklin This January

FAIT DU SOIR La piscine municipale de Saint-Gilles rénovée : plus de 500 personnes l'ont déjà visitée
<p>Le maillot laiss&eacute; aux vestiaires, mais comme un poisson dans l&#39;eau, Eddy Valadier a inaugur&eacute; hier, mercredi 14 janvier, les travaux de r&eacute;habilitation et d&#39;extension de la piscine municipale de Saint-Gilles. Un chantier qui aura dur&eacute; un peu plus de deux ans. &quot;<em>&Agrave; l&#39;heure o&ugrave; certaines communes faisaient le choix de fermer leur piscine car souvent consid&eacute;r&eacute;es comme trop co&ucirc;teuses, &agrave; Saint-Gilles nous avons fait le choix contraire, prenant une fois de plus le taureau par les cornes</em>&quot;, a soulign&eacute; le premier &eacute;dile saint-gillois. En 2022, une trentaine de bassins publics en France avaient cess&eacute; leur activit&eacute; en raison de la crise de l&rsquo;&eacute;nergie.</p> <p><figure class="image"> <img src="https://medias.objectifgard.com/api/v1/images/view/6968ce019a467d5fa90320e3/article/image.jpg" alt=""> <figcaption> Le maire de Saint-Gilles et une partie des partenaires financiers, ont d&eacute;voil&eacute; la plaque inaugurale des travaux de r&eacute;novation et d&#39;extension de la piscine municipale.&nbsp; • <strong>S.Ma</strong> </figcaption> </figure></p> <p>Un peu d&#39;histoire. L&#39;&eacute;quipement public&nbsp;de Saint-Gilles a &eacute;t&eacute; construit&nbsp;en 1977 dans le cadre du programme national &quot;Mille piscines&quot;. Une initiative qui d&eacute;coulait&nbsp;des mauvais r&eacute;sultats des nageurs fran&ccedil;ais aux Jeux Olympiques d&#39;&eacute;t&eacute; de 1968, et fut acc&eacute;l&eacute;r&eacute;e l&#39;ann&eacute;e suivante apr&egrave;s&nbsp;deux accidents tragiques. La noyade de 19 enfants d&rsquo;un centre a&eacute;r&eacute; dans la Loire et celle de 24 personnes lors du naufrage d&rsquo;un bateau-promenade sur le lac L&eacute;man. Le programme visait avant tout &agrave; promouvoir l&rsquo;apprentissage de la natation, notamment chez les scolaires. Entre la fin des ann&eacute;es 70 et le d&eacute;but des ann&eacute;es 80, 183 piscines dites Tournesol et 196 de type Caneton sont sorties de terre. <meta charset="UTF-8" />Dont une &agrave; Saint-Gilles, pour ce dernier mod&egrave;le, dot&eacute;e donc d&rsquo;un toit mobile permettant une ouverture estivale et un apport important de lumi&egrave;re.</p> <h2>Ouverture officielle le lundi 19 janvier 2026</h2> <p>Avant sa fermeture &agrave; l&#39;automne 2023, la piscine accueillait en moyenne 30 000 baigneurs par an parmi lesquels des &eacute;coliers, des coll&eacute;giens, les adh&eacute;rents de l&#39;Hippocampe Club Saint-Gillois et l&#39;association nautique saint-gilloise, ainsi que le grand public. &quot;<em>Situ&eacute;e en bord du quartier prioritaire politique de la ville, elle joue un r&ocirc;le essentiel pour ses habitants et contribue concr&egrave;tement &agrave; l&#39;&eacute;galit&eacute; d&#39;acc&egrave;s au sport, &agrave; l&#39;apprentissage de la natation et &agrave; la r&eacute;ussite &eacute;ducative</em>&quot;, a indiqu&eacute; Eddy Valadier.&nbsp;<meta charset="UTF-8" />Et l&rsquo;engouement pour cet &eacute;quipement d&eacute;sormais r&eacute;nov&eacute; s&rsquo;est fait ressentir d&egrave;s hier : plus de 500 curieux l&rsquo;ont visit&eacute;, avant son ouverture officielle pr&eacute;vue ce lundi 19 janvier.</p> <p><figure class="image"> <img src="https://medias.objectifgard.com/api/v1/images/view/6968ce010e1073b3c4055653/article/image.jpg" alt=""> <figcaption> La…
