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NASA considers moon mission for Mars-type rover
NASA announced four new contracts for commercial lunar landers for the agency’s moon plans, but dropped news that it’s toying with the idea of sending to the moon a sister rover to the ones currently active on Mars.
“It’s existed. You just didn’t know its name,” said NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman during a Tuesday update. “It�...Read more
After Supreme Court bars protections, Florida's Haitians, Syrians face fears
Kéto Nord Hodges, a Hillsborough County schoolteacher, thinks of 1779.
That September, thousands of soldiers sieged against the British in the foggy swamps of Savannah. Nearly 550 of them were Haitian, members of a French infantry regiment of Black and mixed-race soldiers who were promised freedom at the end of their service.
As the United ...Read more
Queen Camilla faces backlash for capping off Pride Month with J.K. Rowling
Queen Camilla capped off Pride Month with a dose of controversy, sharing a photo of herself with J.K. Rowling, who in recent years has fallen from favor with remarks widely viewed as blatantly transphobic.
The queen consort, 78, posed with the 60-year-old author at the Palace of Holyroodhouse in Edinburgh, according to the portrait of the pair ...Read more
Supreme Court will decide a gun-rights challenge to blue-state bans on assault weapons
WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court announced Tuesday that it will hear a Second Amendment challenge to the gun laws in Connecticut and Cook County, Ill., that ban most semiautomatic assault weapons.
Before leaving for the summer recess, the justices issued orders on new cases that will be heard in the fall. The new Second Amendment case figures ...Read more
California health officials warn of West Nile virus in mosquito in Alhambra, human infection in Long Beach
LOS ANGELES — Health authorities are warning residents to take precautions after the deadly West Nile virus was detected in a mosquito caught in the San Gabriel Valley.
The announcement comes on the heels of the first human case of the virus reported in Long Beach.
West Nile virus is a mosquito-borne infection that could be fatal to humans ...Read more
NC budget ends one incentive for data centers, keeps other tax breaks
North Carolina data center operators stand to lose a 20-year-old tax break while keeping other incentives under the budget Republican state Senate and House leaders released Tuesday.
The proposed bill ends a sales tax exemption for electricity used on site. The General Assembly estimates this will save the state $21.4 million in the upcoming ...Read more
Election officials' sample ballot shows how they seek to distinguish two Dan Sullivans in U.S. Senate race
ANCHORAGE, Alaska — Shortly after losing its battle to keep a second Dan Sullivan off the Aug. 18 primary ballot, the Alaska Division of Elections on Monday released a sample ballot that takes unusual steps to distinguish between the incumbent U.S. senator and the challenger of the same name.
The sample ballot indicates that the challenger ...Read more
After NYC's Democratic Socialists of America group pressures Mamdani, city budget doesn't boost NYPD headcount
NEW YORK — The city’s $125.8 billion budget deal doesn’t include a previously planned NYPD headcount increase — coming after Mayor Zohran Mamdani faced pressure from his base to scrap his plan to add more officers.
At a budget press conference on Monday morning, Mamdani said he backed down from increasing the headcount after speaking to...Read more
Top-ranking official at SC jail arrested in sweeping alleged crime cover-up
COLUMBIA, S.C. — A top official at Alvin S. Glenn Detention Center, the large Richland County, S.C. jail, has been arrested as part of a monthslong investigation into a sweeping alleged cover-up of more than 60 crimes involving inmates and guards at the jail, Sheriff Leon Lott announced Tuesday.
James Lipscomb, 66, one of two top officials at...Read more
NPR retracts story claiming Supreme Court Justice Alito is retiring
NPR retracted a bombshell report claiming Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito plans to retire.
A story written by award-winning legal affairs correspondent Nina Totenberg was published briefly Tuesday morning, reporting that Alito, whose time remaining on the nation’s highest court often generates speculation, planned to step down.
The 76-...Read more
Top-ranking official at SC jail arrested in sweeping alleged crime cover-up
COLUMBIA, S.C. — A top official at Alvin S. Glenn Detention Center, the large Richland County, S.C. jail, has been arrested as part of a monthslong investigation into a sweeping alleged cover-up of more than 60 crimes involving inmates and guards at the jail, Sheriff Leon Lott announced Tuesday.
James Lipscomb, 66, one of two top officials at...Read more
Colorado wildfires: Uncontained fires scorch nearly 90,000 acres, 'critical fire weather' forecast
DENVER — Large wildfires burning across southern and western Colorado continued to spread on Tuesday, together scorching nearly 90,000 acres — roughly 140 square miles.
“Critical fire weather” — hot, dry and windy — is expected each day this week and could spur the growth of existing and new wildfires across the state, according to ...Read more
Supreme Court rejects Trump's plan to limit birthright citizenship
WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court on Tuesday upheld the Constitution’s promise that all those born in the country are citizens of the United States, regardless of the status of their parents.
In a 6-3 decision, the justices rejected President Donald Trump’s plan to revise the Constitution by executive order and to end citizenship at birth ...Read more
For crucial federal agencies, the veneer of independence is stripped away
WASHINGTON — Federal agencies long regarded as pillars of nonpartisan stability are facing an identity crisis after the Supreme Court this week swept away nearly a century of precedent limiting presidential power.
The high court's decision in Trump vs. Slaughter, allowing the president to remove members of historically independent agencies ...Read more
TikTok finalizing settlement of addiction lawsuit to avoid trial
TikTok is finalizing a settlement related to a lawsuit claiming that the world’s largest social media platforms are addictive to minors, according to people familiar with the matter, avoiding a jury trial scheduled for July in Los Angeles.
The settlement amount with TikTok is confidential, said the people, who asked not to be named discussing...Read more
Florida board votes to ban undocumented students from state colleges
The State Board of Education voted Tuesday to ban undocumented students from enrolling in state colleges, a move that brings the state one step closer to becoming the largest in the nation to shut these immigrants out of publicly financed higher education.
The board, which oversees the state’s 28 state colleges, voted in a 6-1 decision ...Read more
Supreme Court rules that states may ban trans athletes from girls' sports teams
WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court on Tuesday upheld laws in West Virginia and Idaho that forbid transgender athletes from competing on girls' sports teams.
In a 6-3 decision, the court said the federal Title IX law envisioned separate teams for girls and boys based on their biological sex at birth.
"Separate sports teams for biological males ...Read more
Judge rules memoir by defendant in Tupac killing case is admissible
LAS VEGAS — A judge ruled Tuesday that a memoir by the man accused of organizing the killing of iconic rapper Tupac Shakur is admissible evidence.
Authorities have accused Duane “Keffe D” Davis, 63, in connection with the fatal shooting of Shakur near the Strip in 1996. His trial is scheduled to begin Aug. 10.
A memoir called "Compton ...Read more
Sam Page sues Phil Berger's son, alleging interference in NC Senate campaign
RALEIGH, N.C. — Sam Page, whose shocking victory in this year’s Republican primary ousted longtime North Carolina Senate leader Phil Berger, is now suing Berger’s son in federal court.
Page, who is the sheriff of Rockingham County, alleges that county commissioner Kevin Berger engaged in a campaign of retaliation against him for running ...Read more
California may soon test children on math as early as kindergarten in effort to curb dismal scores
LOS ANGELES — Confronted with math test scores showing that 68% of California public school third-graders do not meet grade-level standards, state lawmakers are considering one way to potentially reverse the trend: Give kindergartners a math test to find out if they are ready for the rigors of first grade.
Do they have a sense of what numbers...Read more
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