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Feb 01 2021
Opinion
Do We Ask Too Much of Black Heroes?
This is the first piece in “Black History, Continued,” a series that will explore pivotal moments and transformative figures in Black culture and examine how the past shapes the present and the future.
In the early 20th century, before Negro History Week had turned into Black History Month, African-American teachers and children in schools throughout the segregated South would paste
New York Times (News)Mar 02 2020
News
Trump on Buttigieg dropping out: ‘Dems taking Bernie out of play’
President Trump on Sunday night tweeted that Pete Buttigieg dropping out of the presidential race signals the “beginning of the Dems taking Bernie out of play.”
“Pete Buttigieg is OUT,” Trump wrote following reports that the former South Bend, Indiana mayor decided to suspend his campaign.
“All of his SuperTuesday votes will go to Sleepy Joe Biden.”
Trump called Buttigieg’
New York Post (News)Mar 11 2020
Opinion
How coronavirus could cost Trump his base — or turn him into a Republican champion for Democrats’ programs
On Rainey Street, one of Austin’s premier party districts, Little Brother Bar propped up a sign just before the city’s famed South by Southwest festival was canceled. It read: “Went to SXSW & all I got was this coronavirus.”
Like so many other small businesses — and they don’t come much tinier than Little Brother, with room for just eight customers — the spread of the virus knocked
Guest Writer - CenterJan 05 2020
News
Australia fires kill half a billion animals as crisis mounts
Nearly half a billion animals in Australia’s New South Wales state have been killed by raging wildfires in the last couple months, and the devastating death toll is expected to rise.
Roughly 480 million mammals, birds and reptiles have been affected since bushfires started in September, according to ecologists from the University of Sydney, who add that the actual number is likely much
CNBCFeb 14 2020
News
Bernie Explains Why Being Labeled a Socialist Won't Hurt Him
Democratic presidential candidate Sen. Bernie Sanders (VT) said he is not concerned of being labeled as a socialist from his opponents because the United States is already a "socialist society."
"CBS This Morning" anchor Tony Dokoupil asked Sanders on Friday how describing himself as a democratic socialist could hurt him in the upcoming South Carolina primary.
"Let me just tell
TownhallJan 14 2019
News
President Trump Rejects Proposal to Temporarily Reopen the Government
President Trump said on Monday that he has rejected a proposal by Senator Lindsey Graham of South Carolina to temporarily reopen the government in an effort to jump-start talks with Democratic lawmakers on funding a border wall.
New York Times (News)Nov 29 2018
News
Trump Judicial Nominee Set To Fail Amid Voter Suppression Charges
The controversial judicial nomination of Thomas Farr has been derailed in the Senate. South Carolina Sen. Tim Scott — the lone African-American Republican in the Senate — sealed Farr's fate
NPR (Online News)Jan 24 2020
News
Bodies of U.S. firefighters retrieved from crash site in Australia
MELBOURNE (Reuters) - The bodies of three U.S. firefighters who died in a plane crash earlier this week in Australia’s remote bushland while battling a fierce wildfire have been recovered, the police said on Saturday.
“I can confirm that the bodies have been recovered,” a New South Wales Police spokesperson told Reuters in an e-mail. “They have been taken for a post mortem examination
ReutersJul 02 2024
Headline Roundup
U.S. to Help Panama Block Migration Through Darién Gap
The U.S. and Panama have reached a deal aiming to “close the passage of illegal migrants” through the Darién Gap.
The Details: Panama’s new president, José Raúl Mulino, has vowed to close the Darién Gap to people traveling north to the U.S. Under the agreement, the U.S. will support “equipment, transportation and logistics” related to dealing with foreigners who break Panamanian
Christian Science Monitor CNN Digital The Daily CallerJan 26 2021
News
Moderna’s COVID-19 Vaccine Works Against the New Mutant Strains. Is That Enough?
First, the good news: in a study published Jan. 25 on a preprint server, Moderna says its COVID-19 vaccine continues to protect against two of the major mutant strains of SARS-CoV-2 circulating around the world: one that was first identified in the U.K. (called B.1.1.7) and one first seen in South Africa (B.1.351).
Now, the not-so-good news. Blood from people vaccinated with the company
Time Magazine