
Man suspected in Brown University shooting and MIT professors killing is found dead, officials say
A frantic search for the suspect in last weekend’s mass shooting at Brown University ended at a New Hampshire storage facility where authorities discovered the man dead inside and then revealed he also was suspected of killing a Massachusetts Institute of Technology professor. Claudio Neves Valente, 48, a former Brown student and Portuguese national, was found dead Thursday night from a self-inflicted gunshot wound, said Col. Oscar Perez, the Providence police chief. Investigators believe he...
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- Man suspected in Brown University shooting and MIT professors killing is found dead, officials say
- How 1 anonymous tipster cracked the Brown University shooting case
- Federal regulators to begin sifting through wreckage of North Carolina plane crash that killed 7
- Trump suspends green card lottery program that let Brown University, MIT shootings suspect into US
- California school district near Nevada caught up in a dispute over transgender athlete policies
Trump gave an unusually partisan White House address. Should networks have given him the TV time?
ATLANTA (AP) — When Donald Trump delivered the first White House address of his second presidency Wednesday night, all major U. S. networks beamed his image and voice onto their airwaves, cable feeds and online platforms. Americans ended up watching the Republican president stand in the Diplomatic Reception Room and deliver 18 minutes of aggressive, politically motivated arguments that misstated facts, blamed the nation’s ills on his predecessor, exaggerated the results of his nearly 11 in...
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- Trump gave an unusually partisan White House address. Should networks have given him the TV time?
- Young conservative women find a home in Turning Point with Charlie Kirk's widow at the helm
- Conservatives clash at Turning Point USA conference over MAGA movement's direction
- Ahead of Trump's visit, residents in a North Carolina town say they feel squeezed by high costs
- Justice Department faces deadline to release files on Epstein sex trafficking investigation
Hubble Space Telescope spies dusty debris from two cosmic collisions
NEW YORK (AP) — NASA's Hubble Space Telescope got a rare look at the aftermath of two cosmic collisions — and helped scientists solve a decades-old mystery. Many years ago, scientists saw a dense, bright spot near a young star called Fomalhaut. They thought it could be a planet and continued to track it. But in 2023, Hubble's pictures revealed something strange. The bright spot had vanished — and a new one had appeared — a sign that it wasn't a planet after all. Scientists had stumbled...
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- Hubble Space Telescope spies dusty debris from two cosmic collisions
- Along the Texas Coast, a new sanctuary aims to protect the endangered and rare whooping crane
- Trump Media to merge with nuclear fusion company that wants to power AI
- Catch the Ursid meteor shower as it peaks just before Christmas
- Rain creates a crimson spectacle on Iran's Hormuz Island for the first time this year

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