News bulletin 2021/11/04 07:17
News bulletin 2021/11/04 07:17
News bulletin 2021/11/04 07:17
The Justice Department is fed up with high concert ticket prices. It's Thursday's news.
Donald Trump headed into hostile territory Thursday for a rare rally in deeply Democratic New York -- hoping to woo Black and Latino voters whose support for Joe Biden has shown signs of faltering.In his first rally in his former hometown since 2016, Trump was expected to focus on crime and tough economic conditions in one of the most Democratic and diverse US neighborhoods, where almost two-thirds of residents are Hispanic and one-third Black.
A Georgia prosecutor on Thursday appealed a ruling dismissing some of the criminal charges against former President Donald Trump and other defendants in an election interference case. The notice of appeal filed by Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis does not say why an appeals court should reverse the March dismissal. Fulton County Superior Court Judge Scott McAfee quashed six counts in the indictment, including three against Trump, saying the counts did not allege sufficient detail regarding the nature of the violations.
The question of whether Biden will appear on the state ballot has become entangled in a partisan legislative fight to keep foreign money out of state ballot campaigns.
A group of youth services organizations, a school district, a counselor and others sued Thursday to block a new Washington state parental rights law that critics describe as a “forced outing” measure. The Democratic-led Legislature overwhelmingly approved it, with progressive lawmakers wanting to keep it off the fall ballot while calculating that courts would likely block it. Known as Initiative 2081, the law requires schools to notify parents in advance of medical services offered to their child, except in emergencies, and of medical treatment arranged by the school resulting in follow-up care beyond normal hours.
TikTok announced Thursday that it would be further limiting the reach of state-affiliated media accounts outside of their home countries.
Three U.S. troops suffered non-combat injuries in the effort to make a temporary pier off the coast of Gaza into a conduit for humanitarian aid, with one in critical condition at an Israeli hospital, U.S. officials said on Thursday. The injuries were the first for U.S. forces during the latest operation to bring humanitarian aid to Palestinians. The pier was announced by U.S. President Joe Biden in March and involved the military assembling the floating structure off the coast.
Polling shows that Latino voters broadly say that former President Donald Trump would do a better job securing the border than President Joe Biden.
Licensed Arizona physicians who have performed an abortion in the last two years can apply for a temporary California license, and if they qualify, receive it in five days.
Gov. Mike DeWine calls it "unacceptable, "ridiculous" and "absurd" that lawmakers haven't found a solution to get the sitting president on the Ohio ballot.
Regulators gave major securities exchanges the green light to list exchange-traded funds that hold ether, the first major step toward allowing the new products to trade.
Jeffrey Gundlach, the chief executive of investment management company DoubleLine Capital, expects a U.S. recession as soon as this year, he said on Thursday, as higher interest rates pressure U.S. consumers and companies. Signals of brewing trouble in the U.S. economy such as rising credit card delinquencies and softer retail sales data suggest the possibility of an economic contraction is more imminent than the risk of an inflationary rebound, he said. "There's a lot of recessionary signals out there," he said, speaking at a webinar hosted by David Rosenberg, founder and president of Rosenberg Research.
High school class valedictorian Alem Hadzic was unusually somber before delivering his commencement speech on May 16.
A Holocaust museum in New York City will offer free educational field trips to eighth grade students in public schools in a program announced Thursday aimed at combating antisemitism. The program will allow up to 85,000 students at traditional public schools and charter schools to tour Manhattan’s Museum of Jewish Heritage over the next three years, starting this fall. New York City is the largest school district in the nation, serving more than a million students.
Guardant Health’s Shield tests could be the first approved blood screening test for colorectal cancer that meets requirements for Medicare reimbursement.
Preholiday costs are about 5% below their inflation-adjusted average since 2000.
Industrial pollock trawlers' bycatch and ecological damage in Alaska are at issue with two bills introduced by U.S. Rep. Mary Peltola
A federal judge has sentenced Baltimore’s former top prosecutor Marilyn Mosby to time served and 12 months of home confinement – to be served concurrently with 3 years of supervised release – for mortgage fraud and perjury.
YouTube video essayist Jenny Nicholson described how she paid over $6,000 for her and another guest who shared one room on the Galactic Starcruiser.
U.S. Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito is embroiled in a second flag controversy in as many weeks, this time over a banner that in recent years has come to symbolize sympathies with the Christian nationalist movement and the false claim that the 2020 presidential election was stolen. An “Appeal to Heaven” flag was flown last summer outside Alito’s beach vacation home in New Jersey, according to The New York Times, which obtained several images showing it on different dates in July and September 2023. The Times previously reported that an upside down American flag — a sign of distress — had flown outside Alito's Alexandria, Virginia, home less than two weeks after the violent Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol by supporters of former President Donald Trump.