The scene at the airport in Duluth, Minn., on Wednesday night was jubilant and carefree, despite the 40-degree temperatures, pelting rain and blustery wind blowing toward Lake Superior. A 3,000-person audience
Getting the Virus Can Change a Politician’s Mind, Say Some Who Had It
Three American governors. Four United States senators. At least a dozen members of the House of Representatives. The mayor of Miami. The mayor of Atlanta. A judge in Luzerne County, Pa.
Wisconsin Is Frazzled by Surging Virus Cases and Growing Campaign Frenzy
If there is one thing people in Wisconsin can agree on, it is this: Their nerves are frayed.
The constant whirl of political activity in this pivotal swing state has only
The Proud Boys, Who Trade in Political Violence, Get a Boost From Trump
Over the past four years, the group has engaged in clashes in cities like Portland, Ore., and Berkeley, Calif., as well as at the notorious neo-Nazi march in Charlottesville, Va., in
Breonna Taylor Grand Jury Audio Reveals Conflicting Accounts of Fatal Raid
Officers said the police knocked and announced themselves before the raid.
Grand jurors heard at least two Louisville police officers who were at the raid on Ms. Taylor’s apartment
Federal Prisons Will Let Inmates Have Visitors During Pandemic
The federal prison system “is committed to protecting the health and welfare of those individuals entrusted to our care, as well as our staff, their families, and the communities where we
‘Super Healthy’ College Student Dies of Rare Covid-19 Complications
“Chad was so kind,” Ms. Maxcy said. “Always a smile. Always a dance. He was that kid that everybody loved.”
David Dorrill said an autopsy was being conducted. “He was healthy,”
Colleges Learn How to Suppress Coronavirus: Extensive Testing
At Delaware State University, a historically Black college with about 1,800 of its 5,000 students living on campus this semester, partnerships with the nonprofit Testing for America and the Thurgood Marshall
The Army Rolls Out a New Weapon: Strategic Napping
During deployments in Iraq and Afghanistan, commanders often failed to prioritize sleep. Changing schedules, long duty shifts and overnight missions led to chronic fatigue that fueled a
A Counter to Confederate Monuments, Black Cemeteries Tell a Fuller Story of the South
No firm accounting exists of how many Black cemeteries there are, or how many have disappeared to urban development and highway construction, but historians say that in the flowering of Black
Breonna Taylor Grand Jury Recording Released: Live Updates
Officers said the police knocked and announced themselves before the raid.
Grand jurors heard at least two Louisville police officers who were at the raid on Ms. Taylor’s apartment
With Evictions Looming, Cities Revisit a Housing Experiment From the ’70s
But the concept behind the Moscone plan had resilience, and in 1980 it became embodied in legislation passed in the District of Columbia: the Tenant Opportunity to Purchase Act, or Topa.
2-Day Delay Granted in Release of Breonna Taylor Grand Jury Recording
The judge’s order allowing the extension was not immediately available on the Kentucky courts website on Wednesday. Stew Mathews, a lawyer representing Mr. Hankison, confirmed the attorney