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View Post

The Mystery Of Julian Assange’s Cat

By Matthew S. Schwartz

Assange was arrested Thursday after the Ecuadorian Embassy in London said he was no longer welcome. But what happened to the self-proclaimed master of “counter-purrveillance?”

View Post

A Van, An Excavator And A Slew Of ATM Thefts, Northern Ireland Police Plead For Help

By Vanessa Romo

With the help of heavy construction equipment and a van with an ATM-size hole cut out of its roof, thieves are clawing entire cash boxes out of local businesses and disappearing into the night.

‘New York Post’ Denounced For Publishing Sept. 11 Photo With Rep. Ilhan Omar Words

By Sasha Ingber

The newspaper’s cover featured an image of the 2001 terrorist attack and a partial quote by Omar about the incident. Fellow lawmakers and activists expressed outrage at the paper’s editorial decision.

View Post

Analysis: Does Netanyahu’s Win Maintain Status Quo Or Push Israel Further Right?

By Larry Kaplow

The Israeli prime minister’s fourth consecutive term — fifth total — comes as he flirts with lightning-rod issues and hard-right and religious factions.

View Post

How Much Did WikiLeaks Damage U.S. National Security?

By Greg Myre

This question has been a source of debate since the group published hundreds of thousands of U.S. military documents and diplomatic cables in 2010, many related to U.S. wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.

View Post

Trump Threatens To Send Detained Immigrants To ‘Sanctuary Cities’ As Retaliation

By Jessica Taylor

After his administration knocked down reports that such a policy was being considered, the president tweeted that “strong considerations” were being given to the idea as political retribution.

View Post

Watchdogs Cite Lax Medical And Mental Health Treatment Of ICE Detainees

By Sarah Varney

The Adelanto ICE Processing Center houses nearly 2,000 people in California. Federal, state and watchdog reviews say the Florida-based firm that runs Adelanto fails to provide adequate health care.

View Post

Chevron To Expand In Permian Basin, Acquiring Anadarko Petroleum For $33 Billion

By Camila Domonoske

Anadarko, an oil and gas production and exploration company, has assets in Mozambique, the Gulf of Mexico and, significantly, in Texas — where multinationals are doubling down on the Permian boom.

View Post

Does Empathy Have A Dark Side?

By Jonathan Lambert

It’s good to feel empathy, right? Not always, according to a forthcoming book. Humans are empathetic beings, and we sometimes harm others, not out of a failure of empathy, but because of it.

View Post

Edible Archives Project Aims To Revive Hundreds Of Vanishing Indian Rice Strains

By Charukesi Ramadurai

As hybrid varieties gained popularity, hundreds of indigenous strains of rice — and knowledge about them — disappeared. But chefs, farmers and researchers are trying to reconnect to that heritage.

View Post

Kim Tightens Leadership Over North Korea In Major Government Reshuffle

By Anthony Kuhn

The North Korean leader shunted aside a pair of long-serving senior officials and seated a newly elected parliament. The move is thought to be aimed at helping Kim ride out U.S. sanctions.

Keeping It Civil: How To Talk Politics Without Letting Things Turn Ugly

By Caroline Kelly

Whether it’s shouting matches in Congress, feuds on social media, a testy exchange between co-workers or a heated argument among family members, civility increasingly feels like a relic of the past.

South Korean Court Strikes Down Decades-Old Abortion Ban

By Se Eun Gong

The country’s Constitutional Court overturned the ban enacted in 1953. Despite South Korea’s heavily Christian population, in recent years anti-abortion sentiment has softened.

Big Ag Is Pushing Laws To Restrict Neighbors’ Ability To Sue Farms

By Leah Douglas

The push is a response to the millions of dollars awarded to five groups of farm neighbors in North Carolina who sued a subsidiary of pork giant Smithfield Foods over water and air pollution.

View Post

Tusk Luck: Alaska Man Sentenced To Federal Prison For Stealing Mammoth Fossil

By Cat Schuknecht

An Alaska man and his co-conspirator took a fossilized tusk from a Bureau of Land Management museum. Then, they cut it up and sold off the pieces.

Beyond Crabgrass: A Look At America’s ‘Radical Suburbs’

By Etelka Lehoczky

Amanda Kolson Hurley is well-acquainted with suburbia’s many negative stereotypes. But in a new book, she asks us to take a look at what is possible in this realm when the human spirit is at its best.

A Dystopian High School Musical Foresaw The College Admissions Scandal

By Elissa Nadworny

A California high school is staging an original musical called Ranked. It’s set it a world where class rank means everything, and some parents are willing pay for their student to get a better spot.

View Post

Democratic Candidates Are Releasing Tax Returns, Answering Big Questions For Voters

By Domenico Montanaro

President Trump has refused to release his tax returns. Many Democrats are using that against him, as they reveal their own personal wealth and financial interests.

View Post

Chicago Files Civil Complaint Against ‘Empire’ Actor Jussie Smollett

By Tom Cole

The city maintains that Smollett filed a false police report and is seeking repayment of the costs incurred in investigating it.

View Post

McConnell’s 2020 Plan: Cast GOP As ‘Firewall’ Against Socialism

By Kelsey Snell

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell acknowledged that Republicans need to regain support with women and college graduates in the suburbs — which he said led to loss of the House in 2018.

View Post

New Hampshire Poised To Eliminate Death Penalty

By Matthew S. Schwartz

The state Senate passed a bill Thursday repealing capital punishment. The governor has threatened to veto it, but supporters have enough votes to override a veto.

View Post

A Bill Banning Most Abortions Becomes Law In Ohio

By Gabe Rosenberg

The ACLU of Ohio and other organizations that advocate for abortion rights will sue to block the law, one of most restrictive in the country. “We’re counting on [a lawsuit],” say the law’s supporters.

View Post

Tayari Jones Takes Home Aspen Words Literary Prize For ‘An American Marriage’

By Colin Dwyer

The novel earned Jones the $35,000 award for tackling difficult social issues in fiction. The prize’s head judge says the book is “going to have a place in the literary imagination for a long time.”

View Post

Israeli Robotic Moon Landing Fails In Final Descent

By Richard Gonzales

Israeli scientists are studying what caused an engine failure in the closing minutes of what they hoped would be a historic lunar landing.

View Post

Navy Drops Criminal Charges Against Officers In USS Fitzgerald Collision Case

By Vanessa Romo

The decision ends a legal battle in which the Navy blamed Cmdr. Bryce Benson and Lt. Natalie Combs for what it called an “avoidable” accident. The move is likely to end their naval careers.

View Post

Pope Benedict Breaks 6-Year Silence To Comment On Clergy Sex Abuse Scandal

By Tom Gjelten

Two popes speaking simultaneously on the most divisive issue facing the church is remarkable. Benedict’s letter may well raise concerns that the Vatican can no longer speak with a single voice.

View Post

How The Trump Administration’s Transgender Troop Ban Is Affecting One Military Family

By Ailsa Chang

The Trump administration gave transgender service members a deadline to secure a medical diagnosis before the new ban took hold. But military families are struggling with the accelerated timeline.

View Post

‘Bomb Cyclone’ Shutters Schools, Makes Roads Impassable In Central U.S.

By Matthew S. Schwartz

The springtime storm is bringing blizzard conditions to states throughout the Plains and Midwest. Minnesota braced to face the brunt of the storm Thursday.

View Post

Michael Avenatti Indicted For Allegedly Stealing Paraplegic Client’s Settlement Money

By Merrit Kennedy

The lawyer, who represented Stormy Daniels and is already facing federal financial crimes charges, has been indicted on 36 counts of embezzlement and fraud by a California federal grand jury.

View Post

Greg Craig, Onetime White House Counsel, Charged In Ukraine Case

By Carrie Johnson

The well-known D.C. lawyer stepped down from a powerful law firm that has been ensnared in the Russia investigation over failure to disclose work for a foreign client as required by an obscure law.

View Post

12 Years Of Disruption: A WikiLeaks Timeline

By David Welna

The impact of WikiLeaks on the world’s politics, journalism and culture has been transformative. Here are the highlights.

View Post

Chickenpox, The Latest Burden On The Rohingya Refugees

By Jason Beaubien

At the largest refugee camp in the world, Rohingya refugees and aid agencies face numerous challenges. Now they’re also dealing with an outbreak of chickenpox.

View Post

‘I Never Had A Plan B’: Henry Winkler On His Career, From The Fonz To ‘Barry’

By Terry Gross

The actor talks with Fresh Air‘s Terry Gross about struggling with typecasting after Happy Days, his family’s immigration story and about how he found out in his 30s that he had dyslexia.

View Post

How To Calculate The Cost Of College: A Guide To Financial Aid Terms

By Elissa Nadworny

For most students, figuring out where to go to college is closely linked with, “How am I gonna pay for it?” The answer — sort of — comes in lots of confusing terms and jargon.

View Post

A Celebration Of Nipsey Hussle’s Life Takes Place In Los Angeles

By Rodney Carmichael

Watch as the city of Los Angeles celebrates a neighborhood hero, live from the Staples Center, at 10 a.m. PT/12 p.m. ET.

View Post

Report: Voter Rolls Are Growing Owing To Automatic Voter Registration

By Pam Fessler

A new report by the Brennan Center found that automatic voter registration in states has given a big boost to voter rolls in states where it’s been adopted.

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