Headlines
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Federal distrust prompts some Democratic states to protect polling places, election records
Democratic-led states alarmed by the prospect of federal immigration officers patrolling the polls during this year’s midterm elections are taking steps to counter what they see as a potential tactic to intimidate voters
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Video appears to show New York City bomb suspect buying fuse at a fireworks store
Newly released surveillance video appears to show a man buying a fuse at a fireworks store days before authorities say he and another man brought homemade bombs to a protest outside the New York City mayor’s residence
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Widow of Haiti president describes his killing at US trial of four charged with conspiracy
The widow of Haiti’s last elected president described being shot and wounded during the 2021 assassination of her husband Jovenel Moïse
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US stock market remains calm, even as oil prices rise
The U.S. stock market remained calm, even as the price of oil got back to rising
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Iowa bars local gender identity protections after rolling back its civil rights code
Iowa has barred cities and counties from adding local protections for gender identity
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States sue the Trump administration to challenge policy requiring colleges to collect race data
A coalition of 17 state Democratic attorneys general has filed a lawsuit challenging a Trump administration policy that requires higher education institutions to collect data showing they aren't considering race in admissions
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King penguins are the rare species benefiting from a warming world. But that could change
King penguins are adapting to climate change in a way that seems to help them breed successfully, which is unusual
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US Sen. Jon Husted testifies remotely in ex-FirstEnergy executives' corruption trial
Republican U.S. Sen. Jon Husted has testified remotely in Akron, Ohio, in the high-profile corruption trial of two former FirstEnergy Corp. executives
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Los Angeles school superintendent denies wrongdoing and asks for his job back during federal probe
The superintendent of Los Angeles public schools who’s on paid leave during a federal investigation, denies any wrongdoing and asks to be reinstated as head of the nation’s second-largest district
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Early photos of enslaved people in 1850 head home from Harvard to South Carolina museum
Harvard University has handed over rare 1850 photos of enslaved people to a museum in Charleston
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